The right ventricle pumps blood to the lungs
where the alveoli oxygenate the blood. Then the
blood comes back through the pulmonary veins,
and into the left atrium, through the valve to the
ventricle, to the pulmonary artery, and to the different parts
of the body.
The Oxygen rich blood comes from the left atrium of the heart.
The sections of the heart that have O2 rich blood are the left atrium and left ventricle. The left atrium is where the O2 rich blood comes back to the heart from the lungs, and the left ventricle takes that O2 rich blood from the left atrium and delivers it to the aorta for distribution to the body.
The left ventricle is lined with thick cardiac muscle, enabling this chamber to pump oxygenated blood out of the heart, through the aorta, and on to the farthest reaches of the body.
Left ventricle.
All chambers of the heart pump blood.
the left atrium and the left ventricle
i think that it is the left ventricle
left atrium abd lt. ventricle
That would be the right ventricle.
The oxygen(rich)- and poor blood which are pumped in and out of the heart in the ventrical and atrium,with the help of mucsles, creates a sound (which is the sound that you hear)It is the blood getting pumped
the heart receives glucose and oxygen in the blood pumped through
Blood goes into the right side of the heart from the body then pumped to the lungs for purification( this is when oxygen is mixed with haemoglobin( a substance in the body) to make the blood cleaned, it is then pumped to the left side of the heart were it is transported to every part of the body, then the circulation starts all over again.............
All four of the heart's chambers squeeze blood out into the corresponding chamber or artery. The right atrium pumps blood from the body into the right ventricle, and the right ventricle pumps that blood out of an artery that leads to the lungs. The blood then returns to the heart and is pumped by the left atrium to the left ventricle, which pumps the blood to the rest of the body.
False in general as it is only indirectly that blood pumped by the heart is oxygenated. The heart is primarily a pump. Blood pumped to the lungs picks up oxygen (becomes oxygenated) and disposes of carbon dioxide. Oxygen diffusing from the alveoli of the lungs is the true site of oxygenation. Thus the heart's pumping only gives blood the route to the lungs, the site of oxygenation. The heart has no oxygenation powers of its own.
The left venricular chamber of the heart is responsible for pumping the blood throughout the body
Carbon dioxide is at high levels and oxygen at low levels in blood that is being pumped from the heart to the lungs.
blood that is being pump from the heart to the lungs is oxygen.
the un-oxygenated blood is pumped into the lungs where the oxygen is transfused out of the tiny air sacks or avioli before being pumped back to the heart and around the body
The right chamber pumps blood to the lungs to get oxygen.
The blood from the different parts of the body enters the heart through veins in order to be pumped/circulated. First through the lungs to be oxygenated and then back to the body where it can deliver the oxygen. Starting at the heart, freshly oxygenated blood is pumped to the body where the oxygen is used up by muscles etc., and the deoxygenated blood then returns to the heart. It is then pumped to the lungs where it absorbs oxygen from the air you breathe, and finally it is pumped back to the heart and the cycle begins over again.
The oxygen(rich)- and poor blood which are pumped in and out of the heart in the ventrical and atrium,with the help of mucsles, creates a sound (which is the sound that you hear)It is the blood getting pumped
the heart has a four chamber system it takes in the blood with out oxygen, gives it oxygen and pumps it though out the body
oxygen-rich blood is always pumped through out the body.
The oxygen rich blood is usually pumped out of the heart from the left side. It is then pumped to the various parts of the body.
so it has oxygen to give to the rest of the body boooyeh ;)
The lungs pull in oxygen which is then taken into the blood stream which is pumped round the body by the heart.