Physics, asked by rina786mail, 5 months ago

structure of arteries and veins​

Answers

Answered by shravaniMuley
2

Answer:

Arteries and veins are composed of three tissue layers. The thick outermost layer of a vessel (tunica adventitia or tunica externa ) is made of connective tissue. The middle layer ( tunica media ) is thicker and contains more contractile tissue in arteries than in veins.

Explanation:

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Answered by neelimaravikumar2010
0

Structure of Arteries:

The wall of an artery consists of three layers. The innermost layer, the tunica intima (also called tunica interna), is simple squamous epithelium surrounded by a connective tissue basement membrane with elastic fibers. The middle layer, the tunica media, is primarily smooth muscle and is usually the thickest layer.

Structure of veins:

Structure of a vein, which consists of three main layers. The outer layer is connective tissue, called tunica adventitia or tunica externa; a middle layer of smooth muscle called the tunica media, and the inner layer lined with endothelial cells called the tunica intima.

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