What is vasa vasorum?
Part of the cardiovascular system, Vasa vasorum is a network of small blood vessels that help supply larger blood vessels. "Vasa vasorum" literally means "blood vessel blood vessels" in Latin and describe their function of providing blood and oxygen with artery and veins that supply blood and oxygen to the rest of the body. The largest blood vessels in the body, such as aorta, depend on this support network to maintain a healthy function. Oxygenated and deoxygenated blood are transmitted to and from larger blood vessels with these small blood vessels. In order to effectively receive oxygen from the bloodstream, the cells must be very close to the blood vessel or capillary, so oxygen can pass into each individual cell. Most blood vessels and veins absorb oxygen from the blood flowing inside them. However, since large veins and arteries are necessarily so strong, their outer and middle cells lay this next network of blood vessels cannot be adequately nourished to support them by providing oxygenated blood and carrying deoxygenated blood.
There are three main types of Vasorum, which are classified according to the place where they come and where they lead. Internal vasa vasorum comes from an internal artery or vein and passes into the walls of the vessel. Vasa Vasorum Externe comes from the branches of the main artery and then returns to the main artery or vein to nourish the cells further from the interior of the blood vessel. Vasorae venous vasorae originates in the main artery, then flows into the parallel vein of the artery or the "partner" vein. The exact structure and function of Vasorum Vasorum vary depending on which of these types is and where it is.
The Vasorum function in the support of the aorta has been the subject of many studies. In some areas, the Human Aorta does not have Vasorum, and in these areas the aortic walls are much thinner, so in these places it is more likely that any Eurism occurs. Dogs and some other mammals, on the other handOli Eurism. This complex network of vessels is more common in arteries than in veins, probably because arterial walls tend to be stronger and muscular than walls and the largest veins.