Did this video help you?
Blood Vessels: Structure & Function (Edexcel IGCSE Biology: Double Science)
Revision Note
Blood Vessels
- There are three main types of blood vessel:
- Arteries
- Veins
- Capillaries
- Smaller vessels that branch off from arteries are called arterioles (small arteries) and those that branch into veins are called venules (small veins)
- Each vessel has a particular function and is specifically adapted to carry out that function efficiently
Arteries
- Key features:
- Carry blood at high pressure away from the heart
- Carry oxygenated blood (except the pulmonary artery)
- Have thick muscular walls containing elastic fibres
- Have a narrow lumen
- Blood flows through at a fast speed
- The structure of an artery is adapted to its function in the following ways
- Thick muscular walls containing elastic fibres withstand the high pressure of blood and maintain the blood pressure as it recoils after the blood has passed through
- A narrow lumen also helps to maintain high pressure
Veins
- Key features:
- Carry blood at low pressure towards the heart
- Carry deoxygenated blood (other than the pulmonary vein)
- Have thin walls
- Have a large lumen
- Contain valves
- Blood flows through at a slow speed
- The structure of a vein is adapted to its function in the following ways:
- A large lumen reduces resistance to blood flow under low pressure
- Valves prevent the backflow of blood as it is under low pressure
Comparing the structure of arteries and veins
Capillaries
- Key features:
- Carry blood at low pressure within tissues
- Carry both oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
- Have walls that are one cell thick
- Have ‘leaky’ walls
- Speed of blood flow is slow
- The structure of a capillary is adapted to its function in the following ways:
- Capillaries have walls that are one cell thick (short diffusion distance) so substances can easily diffuse in and out of them
- The ‘leaky’ walls allow blood plasma to leak out and form tissue fluid surrounding cells
Structure of a capillary
You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week
Sign up now. It’s free!
Did this page help you?