Blood Pressure and Blood Vessels
Your blood pressure - measured at your brachial artery in your upper arm - represents the force your blood exerts against vessel walls. During exercise, blood pressure increases to ensure working muscles get the oxygen they desperately need.
Understanding the cardiac cycle helps explain pressure changes. Diastole occurs when your ventricles relax and fill with blood, whilst systole happens when your heart muscle contracts and pumps blood into arteries. These alternating phases create the rhythmic pressure changes we measure as blood pressure.
Different blood vessels have distinct characteristics based on their job. Arteries carry high-pressure blood away from your heart, so they're built tough with elastic outer layers and smaller lumens (internal spaces). Veins handle lower-pressure blood returning to your heart, featuring wide lumens, thinner walls, and crucial valves that prevent backflow and blood clots.
Capillaries are the real workhorses of nutrient exchange. These microscopic vessels are just one cell thick, which slows blood flow enough for oxygen, nutrients, and waste products to diffuse between blood and tissues.
Remember This: Blood follows this pathway - Heart → Arteries → Arterioles → Capillaries → Venules → Veins → Heart
The thickness of capillary walls isn't a design flaw - it's perfectly engineered to allow efficient gas and nutrient exchange with surrounding tissues.