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Blood Flow
- blood moves through the circulatory system mostly because of pressure
- blood moves from high pressure to low pressure
- ANALOGY: A garden hose with holes vs. a garden hose with no holes.
- blood is slowed down by resistance in the vessel
- ANALOGY: a kinked hose
- the amount of blood flow is dependent on the radius of the vessel (larger vessel = larger blood flow)
- ANALOGY: Garden hose vs. fire hose
- **This one is most effective**
Blood Flow = (P1 - P2) x r4
*P1 - P2 is the change in pressure gradient
*r is the radius of the vessel
Blood Vessels
- arteries (arterioles) – carry blood away from the heart towards capillaries
- capillaries – microscopic vessels penetrate tissues, single layer of cells for exchange between blood and interstitial fluid
- veins (venules) – return blood to heart from capillaries
Blood Pressure
- highest close to the heart where all the blood is pushed through a single artery/vein
- lowest at the capillaries because they have such a high surface area


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Blood Vessels
Arteries
- deal with high pressure and high velocity of blood ––> large diameter, thick walls.
- main role: distribute blood to the body.
- The aorta is the main artery that comes out of the heart. It then branches off into many arteries, which branch into arterioles.
- Arteries are large and close to the heart and are built to deal with high pressures of blood
- Arterioles are a bit smaller than arteries and contain more elastic tissue
- consists of 3 layers
- outer layer: fiberous connective tissue. Very thick in arteries to help deal with the high pressures.
- middle layer: smooth muscle and elastic tissue. To allow stretch of the vessel when lots of blood is pumped in and through it.
- inner layer: endothelial cells. This is in contact with the lumen.

Capillaries
- main role: to exchange material from the blood with the tissues of the body.
- only a single endothelial layer in wall thickness.
- very tiny diameter ––> RBC must line up in single file to get through
- very slow velocity of blood ––> this is so there can be proper exchange of materials

Veins
- main role: blood collection from capillaries so it can get back to the heart.
- largest veins at the heart: superior vena cava and inferior vena cava
- after the capillary bed we have venules, followed by veins (larger)
- contain valves - The pressure is low in veins and venules. The valves prevent back flow of blood and keep it moving towards the heart.
Comparisons


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Example: Blood Flow
Draw a diagram to demonstrate the movement of blood from the aorta to the capillaries of an organ/tissue. Indicate where there would be high or low pressure.
Practice: Blood Vessels
Rank the following blood vessels in order of blood pressure from highest (1) to lowest (5)
A.
5
B.
4
C.
3
D.
2
E.
1
Arteries
Arterioles
Capillaries
Venules
Veins
You are running an experiment in a lab in research of blood flow in arterioles. You set up one large tube to represent the artery which drains into 3 smaller tubes which represent the arterioles. You note the pressure gradient through all three arterioles is the same. If you wanted lower blood flow in one of the arterioles without altering the pressure gradient, what could you do?
As capillaries converge into fewer vein vessels, what would you most likely see?