Capillary (An Overview)
The arterial blood system branches extensively to deliver blood to
over a billion capillaries in the body. The extensiveness of these
branches is much more readily appreciated by knowing that the
capillaries provide a total surface area of 1,000 square miles for
exchanges of gases, waste, and nutrients between blood and tissue
fluid.
Oxygen rich blood flows from arterioles or small branches of the
artery into the capillary bed and the pressure inside of the arteries
is roughly fifty times that on the inside of the veins. It is this
pressure difference that forces the blood into the capillary bed.
Although the amount of blood flowing through a particular capillary
bed is determined in part by a small circular muscle around the
arteriole branches, the absence of smooth muscle and connective
tissue layers permits a more rapid rate of transport between the
blood and the tissue.
The capillary is the site of internal or cellular respiration and
is responsible for the utilization of oxygen by the tissue and the
transporting of carbon dioxide as waste to the veins for
elimination by the lungs.