1 / 15

Lab 32

Lab 32. Blood Vessels. Vessels - Generalities. Peripheral distributions are the same on the left and right side of the body except near the heart. Most arteries and veins follow similar paths and are often similarly named One vessel can have several names (like a street)

tal
Download Presentation

Lab 32

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lab 32 Blood Vessels

  2. Vessels - Generalities • Peripheral distributions are the same on the left and right side of the body except near the heart. • Most arteries and veins follow similar paths and are often similarly named • One vessel can have several names (like a street) • Many tissues are serviced by several arteries and veins

  3. Veins - Generalities • Veins are far more variable from person ot person than arteries • Several veins, especially in the limbs, have superficial and deep routes. Superficial route usually only caries 10-15% of blood at a maximum and serves to aid in thermoregulation

  4. Vessels to know • Be able to identify the following arteries/veins on a model: inferior and superior vena cava, left and right pulmonary arteries and veins,, common carotid, subclavian, brachiocephalic, coronary • thoracic and abdominal aorta, celiac, renal, axillary, brachial, radial, ulnar, mesenteric, iliac, peroneal, femoral, popliteal, tibial, jugular, celiac, splenic, gastric, hepatic and saphenous.

  5. Major Systemic Arteries Figure 21-20

  6. Branches of the Aortic Arch • Deliver blood to head and neck: • brachiocephalic trunk • right subclavian artery • right common carotid artery • left common carotid artery • left subclavian artery

  7. Arteries of Upper Limbs Subclavian  axial  brachial  splits into radial, ulnar 3D Peel Away

  8. Descending aorta thoracic aorta  abdominal aorta  common illiac  to be continued renal

  9. 3 Unpaired Branches of the Abdominal Aorta • Celiac trunk, divides into: • left gastric artery • splenic artery • common hepatic artery • Superior mesenteric artery • Left mesenteric artery

  10. celiac gastric hepatic splenic mesenteric iliac

  11. Illiac  femoral  popliteal Posterior and anterior tibial. Posteror tibial gives rise to peroneal (fibular)

  12. Veins • Know the veins with the same names as arteries • Exceptions: • saphenous (leg) no comparable artery • jugular (neck) like carotid arteries

  13. Lab #32 • Look at 3 slides: • Artery • Vein • Aorta • For arteries, veins, and aorta, label the three layers and answer the questions • Look at models and diagrams to identify vessels for the practical exam

  14. Artery or Vein? • Arteries have high numbers of elastic fibers, which causes them to recoil when at low pressure (or empty). Causes: • folded or ridged endothelium (since it cannot contract) • constricted lumen (but appears round) • Veins do not constrict like this and they are less resiliant so they collapse in section. Causes: • smooth, unfolded endothelium. • lumens look flattened and oblong

More Related