Anatomy Review Blood Vessel PDF
Anatomy Review Blood Vessel PDF
Anatomy Review Blood Vessel PDF
Page 1. Introduction
• The blood vessels of the body form a closed delivery system that begins and ends at the heart.
Page 2. Goals
• To describe the general structure of blood vessel walls.
• To compare and contrast the types of blood vessels.
• To relate the blood pressure in the various parts of the vascular system to differences in blood vessel
structure.
• Blood flow regulation occurs at the capillary beds. The feeder arteriole brings blood to the capillary
bed. The shunt is a short vessel that directly connects the feeder arteriole and the drainage venule
at the opposite end of the bed. Exchange of materials take place between the tissue cells and the
blood in the true capillaries. The precapillary sphincter is a cuff of smooth muscle fibers that
surround the root of each true capillary, acting as a valve to regulate the flow of blood into the true
capillaries.
Page 18. Exchange of Materials Between Blood & Tissues
• When the precapillary sphincters constrict, blood is diverted away from the true capillaries.
Materials do not exchange between blood and tissues.
2. (Page 3.) What are the names of the three distinct layers of a blood vessel from innermost to outermost?
3. (Page 3.) What is the tunica intima composed of?
5. (Page 3.) What two structures is the tunica media composed of? What is the purpose of each?
6. (Page 3.) What is the tunica adventitia composed of? What is its function?
7. (Page 4.) Tell if the following are characteristic of arteries, capillaries or veins:
a. Presence of smooth muscle allows them to constrict and dilate.
b. Lumens are largest.
c. Have the thickest tunica media.
d. Are able to accommodate a large volume of blood.
e. Exposed to the highest pressures of any vessels.
f. The link between arteries and veins in the pathway of blood.
g. Experience the least pressure.
h. The smallest vessels.
i. Vessels that transport blood away from the heart.
j. The tunica adventitia is the heaviest wall layer.
k. Presence of elastin allows them to stretch and recoil.
l. Walls consist of just a thin tunica intima.
m. Role: the exchange of materials between the blood and the interstitial fluid.
8. (Page 7.) What are the three types of arteries classified by relative size and function? List from largest
to smallest.
9. (Page 8.) What layer of elastic arteries allows them to stretch and recoil?
11. (Page 8-10.) Tell if the following are characteristic of elastic arteries or muscular arteries:
a. Have the greatest amount of elastin, enabling them to expand when blood is forced into them.
b. More smooth muscle and less elastin enables them to actively constrict and relax.
c. Deliver blood to specific body organs.
d. Closest to the heart.
e. When the heart relaxes, they recoil.
f. The tunica media is composed mainly of smooth muscle.
g. Vasomotor fibers of the sympathetic nervous system regulate the size of the lumen.
h. Experience the greatest pressure.
14. (Page 13.) What are the smaller arterioles that allow blood to flow to capillary beds called?
15. (Page 12,13.) Contrast the difference in the layers of a large arteriole compared to a smaller arteriole.
17. (Page 14.) Which of the three types of arteries offers the greatest resistance to blood flow?
18. (Page 16.) What are capillaries made of? How does that affect their function?
21. (Page 19.) What would happen if blood pressures were high in the capillaries?
24. (Page 23.) How does the structure of veins differ from arteries?
26. (Page 24.) List the three factors which assist in returning blood to the heart.
27. (Page 25.) What is the structure and function of venous valves?
28. (Page 25.) Where are venous valves the most abundant?
31. (Pages 9, 11, 14) Match the artery type to its characteristic blood pressure:
1. Aorta & other elastic arteries a. The steepest drop in blood pressure occurs
2. Muscular arteries here.
3. Arterioles b. The pressure begins to decline
c. Experiences the greatest pressure.