The blood vessels consist of arteries, arterioles,
capillaries, venules, and veins. All blood is carried in these vessels. The
arteries, which are strong, flexible, and resilient, carry blood away from the
heart and bear the highest blood pressures. Because arteries are elastic, they
narrow (recoil) passively when the heart is relaxing between beats and thus
help maintain blood pressure. The arteries branch into smaller and smaller
vessels, eventually becoming very small vessels called arterioles. Arteries and
arterioles have muscular walls that can adjust their diameter to increase or
decrease blood flow to a particular part of the body.
Capillaries are tiny, extremely thin-walled vessels that act
as a bridge between arteries (which carry blood away from the heart) and veins
(which carry blood back to the heart). The thin walls of the capillaries allow
oxygen and nutrients to pass from the blood into tissues and allow waste
products to pass from tissues into the blood.

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