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In the lungs, the blood goes through the pulmonary capillary bed.
The network of capillaries that brings blood to an area is called a capillary bed.
The "capillary bed" is the network of capillaries supplying an organ.
This contributes to the death of pulmonary capillary beds.
The light source illuminates the capillary bed of the vaginal wall and the blood circulating within it.
Capillary beds may control their blood flow via autoregulation.
It lets blood return from the capillary beds to the larger blood vessels called veins.
For a vein that connects two systems of capillary beds see portal venous system.
The entire capillary bed may be bypassed by blood flow through arteriovenous anastomoses.
This pressure will eventually decrease the amount of blood flow over the capillary bed, causing the tissue to become ischaemic.
In this way, the analyte binds to the particles while migrating further through the third capillary bed.
Both capillary beds and the blood vessels that connect them are considered part of the portal venous system.
Venules are blood vessels that drain blood directly from the capillary beds.
Thoroughfare channel, a venous vessel receiving blood directly from capillary beds.
If the sphincter is damaged or can not contract, blood can flow into the capillary bed at high pressures.
In some animals, such as dogs, the capillary beds flowing through the nasal cavity help cool the blood flow to the brain.
The Starling Equation describes the flow of a solvent through a capillary bed.
Capillary bed permeability, which varies between tissues.
The ulcers are caused by lack of blood flow to the capillary beds of the lower extremities.
This means that the pulmonary capillary bed must be completely reorganized during and after alveolar formation, it has to mature.
At first there is no flow because of obstruction at the venous end of the capillary bed.
Portal veins carry blood between capillary beds.
(This is the opposite of what happens in capillary beds in the rest of the body.
A portal venous system is a series of veins or venules that directly connect two capillary beds.
Constriction of these sphincters reduces or shuts off blood flow through their respective capillary beds.