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ANP 1105 FINAL EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 100% CORRECT ANSWERS | LATEST VERSION 2025/2026.

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What are the 3 layers of blood vessels? - ANS Tunica intima, tunica media and tunica externa Innermost tunica intima - ANS Simple squamous epithelium to allow a low friction surface Middle tunica media - ANS Smooth muscle and elastic tissue to control the diameter Outermost tunica externa - ANS Nerve and elastic fibers Vasa vasorum - ANS Tiny blood vessels that supply blood for larger ones Vasoconstriction - ANS Smooth muscle constricts to decrease the diameter Vasodilation - ANS Smooth muscle relaxes to increase the diameter Elastic arteries - ANS Thick walled and near the heart. They have the largest lumens and are considered to be the conducting vessels (send blood from heart to medium arteries) Atherosclerosis - ANS Hardening of the arteries. Blood flow gushes/trickles as the heart beats, causing the vessel walls to weaken or eventually balloon out (aneurysm), or burst 2 | Page @COPYRIGHT 2025/2026 ALLRIGHTS RESERVED Muscular arteries - ANS Considered to be the distributing vessels (deliver blood to organs). Diameter ranges greatly Arterioles - ANS The resistance vessels: diameter determines blood flow to capillaries as a mechanism of homeostasis that responds to neural, hormonal, and chemical influences Capillaries - ANS Microscopic vessels with thin walls. They allow the exchange of gasses, nutrients and hormones between the blood and the interstitial fluid (then to the tissues) Continuous capillaries - ANS Least permeable and most common Fenestrated capillaries - ANS Fenestrations increase permeability Sinusoid capillaries - ANS Most permeable to allow large cells to pass. Incomplete basement membrane and large intercellular cleft Capillary beds - ANS Connections between terminal arterioles and postcapillary venules. True capillaries are the exchange vessels and the vascular shunt (thoroughfare channel) bypasses tissue cells Precapillary sphincter - ANS A smooth muscle cuff that regulates blood flow (like a valve) Veins - ANS Return blood to the heart from the venules. Have thin walls because of the low pressure, and large lumens so that blood can be returned to the heart at the same rate that it is pumped out Venous valves - ANS Prevent blood from flowing backwards, made from folds of tunica intima and are mostly in the lo

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ANP 1105 FINAL EXAM QUESTIONS
WITH 100% CORRECT ANSWERS |
LATEST VERSION 2025/2026.




What are the 3 layers of blood vessels? - ANS Tunica intima, tunica media and tunica externa


Innermost tunica intima - ANS Simple squamous epithelium to allow a low friction surface


Middle tunica media - ANS Smooth muscle and elastic tissue to control the diameter


Outermost tunica externa - ANS Nerve and elastic fibers


Vasa vasorum - ANS Tiny blood vessels that supply blood for larger ones


Vasoconstriction - ANS Smooth muscle constricts to decrease the diameter


Vasodilation - ANS Smooth muscle relaxes to increase the diameter


Elastic arteries - ANS Thick walled and near the heart. They have the largest lumens and are
considered to be the conducting vessels (send blood from heart to medium arteries)


Atherosclerosis - ANS Hardening of the arteries. Blood flow gushes/trickles as the heart
beats, causing the vessel walls to weaken or eventually balloon out (aneurysm), or burst

1 | Page @COPYRIGHT 2025/2026 ALLRIGHTS RESERVED

,Muscular arteries - ANS Considered to be the distributing vessels (deliver blood to organs).
Diameter ranges greatly


Arterioles - ANS The resistance vessels: diameter determines blood flow to capillaries as a
mechanism of homeostasis that responds to neural, hormonal, and chemical influences


Capillaries - ANS Microscopic vessels with thin walls. They allow the exchange of gasses,
nutrients and hormones between the blood and the interstitial fluid (then to the tissues)


Continuous capillaries - ANS Least permeable and most common


Fenestrated capillaries - ANS Fenestrations increase permeability


Sinusoid capillaries - ANS Most permeable to allow large cells to pass. Incomplete basement
membrane and large intercellular cleft


Capillary beds - ANS Connections between terminal arterioles and postcapillary venules. True
capillaries are the exchange vessels and the vascular shunt (thoroughfare channel) bypasses
tissue cells


Precapillary sphincter - ANS A smooth muscle cuff that regulates blood flow (like a valve)


Veins - ANS Return blood to the heart from the venules. Have thin walls because of the low
pressure, and large lumens so that blood can be returned to the heart at the same rate that it is
pumped out


Venous valves - ANS Prevent blood from flowing backwards, made from folds of tunica
intima and are mostly in the lower limbs




2 | Page @COPYRIGHT 2025/2026 ALLRIGHTS RESERVED

, Venous sinuses - ANS Specialized veins with thick endothelium walls (example is the
coronary sinus)


Varicose veins - ANS Homeostatic imbalance - dilated veins caused by incompetent valves.
The blood pools in lower limbs and causes valves to weaken


Stages of atherosclerosis - ANS Endothelium is injured, lipids accumulate and oxidize in the
tunica intima, smooth muscle cells proliferate and then the plaque enlarges and becomes
unstable


Consequences of atherosclerosis - ANS Increases the likelihood of clot formation, may cause
aneurysm, angina, heart attack, stroke


Treatment of atherosclerosis - ANS Coronary artery bypass and graft surgery, angioplasty,
stenting or thrombolytic agents


Blood flow - ANS The volume of blood moving though a vessel/organ/entire circulatory
system within a given period (mL/min)


Blood pressure - ANS force exerted on a vessel wall by contained blood (mmHg). A pressure
gradient results from differences in BP between two points


Resistance - ANS Opposition to blood flow due to friction encountered in the vessels


Blood viscosity - ANS Resistance to flow of fluids (increased viscosity=molecules cannot slide
past eachother as well)


Relationship between blood flow and blood pressure - ANS Blood flow is directly
proportional to the difference in blood pressure (+pressure, +flow)


Relationship between blood flow and peripheral resistance - ANS Blood flow is inversely
proportional to peripheral resistance (-resistance, +flow)

3 | Page @COPYRIGHT 2025/2026 ALLRIGHTS RESERVED
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