Circulation and Blood Vessels
Your heart and blood vessels make up your overall
blood circulatory system. Your blood circulatory system is made up of four
subsystems.
Arterial Circulation
Arterial circulation is the part of your overall
blood circulatory system that involves arteries, like the aorta and pulmonary
arteries.
Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away
from your heart. Healthy arteries are strong and elastic. They become narrow
between beats of the heart, and they help keep your blood pressure consistent.
This helps blood circulate efficiently through your body.
Arteries branch into smaller blood vessels called
arterioles (ar-TEER-e-ols). Arteries and arterioles have strong, flexible walls
that allow them to adjust the amount and rate of blood flowing to various parts
of your body.
Venous Circulation
Venous circulation is the part of your overall blood
circulatory system that involves veins, like the vena cavae and pulmonary
veins. Veins are blood vessels that carry blood to your heart.
Veins have thinner walls than arteries. Veins can
widen as the amount of blood passing through them increases.
Capillary Circulation
Capillary circulation is the part of your overall
blood circulatory system where oxygen, nutrients, and waste pass between your
blood and parts of your body.
Capillaries connect the arterial and venous
circulatory subsystems. Capillaries are very small blood vessels.
The importance of capillaries lies in their very
thin walls. Unlike arteries and veins, capillary walls are thin enough that
oxygen and nutrients in your blood can pass through the walls to the parts of
your body that need them to work normally.
Capillaries' thin walls also allow waste products
like carbon dioxide to pass from your body's organs and tissues into the blood,
where it's taken away to your lungs.
Pulmonary Circulation
Pulmonary circulation is the movement of blood from
the heart to the lungs and back to the heart again. Pulmonary circulation
includes both arterial and venous circulation.
Blood without oxygen is pumped to the lungs from the
heart (arterial circulation). Oxygen-rich blood moves from the lungs to the
heart through the pulmonary veins (venous circulation).
Pulmonary circulation also includes capillary
circulation. Oxygen you breathe in from the air passes through your lungs into
your blood through the many capillaries in the lungs. Oxygen-rich blood moves
through your pulmonary veins to the left side of your heart and out of the
aorta to the rest of your body.
Capillaries in the lungs also remove carbon dioxide
from your blood so that your lungs can breathe the carbon dioxide out into the
air. |