One of the tiny blood vessels that connect the arterioles (the
smallest divisions of the arteries) and the venules (the smallest divisions of the
veins). The capillaries form a fine network in many parts of the body.
A lthough minute, the capillaries are a site where much action takes place in
the circulatory system. The walls of the capillaries act as semipermeable membranes
permitting the exchange of various substances between the blood stream and the tissues
of the body. The substances that are interchanged through the capillary walls include
fluids and the key gases oxygen and carbon dioxide.
The word "capillary" originally had more to do with hair than blood vessels.
It comes from the Latin "capillaris" = hair-like, which was derived from "capillus"
= a hair of the head and "caput" = head.
The first person to apply the word "capillary" to the most minute of blood vessels
is thought to have been the architect, engineer, scientist, inventor, poet, sculptor,
painter and anatomic artist Leonardo da Vinci. Leonardo (1452-1519) first became
interested in anatomic art when he was asked by a Veronese anatomist named Marc
Antonia Della Torre to do the illustrations for a text of anatomy. Della Torre was
to do the dissecting and Leonardo the drawings. But Della Torre died unexpectedly.
Not to be deterred by Della Torre's demise, Leonardo assumed both tasks. He dissected
and drew more than 10 human bodies in the cathedral cellar of the mortuary of Santa
Spirito under the secrecy of candlelight, necessitated by the Church's belief in
the sanctity of the human body and a papal decree that forbade human dissection.
Leonardo recognized that a scientific knowledge of the human anatomy could only
be gained by dissecting the human body. This was in striking contrast to the pronouncements
of Galen and other anatomists. Da Vinci injected the blood vessels with wax for
preservation, an anatomical technique still used today, and in so doing he discovered
and named the capillaries (although he did not understand the role they played connecting
the arterioles and venules).
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