No, deoxygenated blood flow back to the heart from the body, and then gets pumped to the lungs to get more oxygen.
both
Oxygenated blood leaves the lungs through the pulmonary veins and then into the left atrium.
Blood entering the pulmonary circuit is deoxygenated. Blood leaving the pulmonary circuit is oxygenated.
It flows inside the pulmonary veins
It depends blood doesnt go into the lungs but if your talking about how does blood travel threw lungs its by veins.
The pulmonary vein brings oxygenated blood from the lungs back to the heart so that it may be circulated all over the body. Anything "pulmonary" has to do with the lungs, like the pulmonary arteries bring de-oxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs so that it may travel to the aveolis and become oxygenated.
Oxygenated blood is pumped out of the heart by the left ventricle.
De-Oxygenated blood. The pulmonary artery is one of the only arteries that carry de-oxygenated blood.
The pulmonary vein brings in oxygenated blood from the lungs through the left atrium and ventricle up into the aorta which then carries the oxygenated blood through the body. The vena cava (main vein) on the right side carries deoxygenated blood through the right atrium through the right ventricle up into the pulmonary artery, which carries the deoxygenated blood to the lungs to get oxygenated again. The pulmonary artery is the only artery to carry deaoxygenated blood.
Most veins do not carry oxygenated blood. The exception is the pulmonary vein, which brings oxygenated blood from the pulmonary circuit to the heart.
Pulmonary circulation is when the right ventricle contracts sending blood through the pulmonary artery to the lungs to get oxygenated, then back through the pulmonary vein into the left atrium.
From the heart, through the arteries, except the pulmonary artery.
The pulmonary veins are the only veins in the body that carry oxygenated blood. Like all veins the blood in the pulmonary veins travel toward the heart.