Arteries
medical terminology book
Capillaries
Arteries
The circulatory system is about the heart pumping blood around your body. The parts the system has are the heart, which pumps blood to the lungs, giving the blood oxygen, and then sends the blood around your body in blood vessels (more specifically, arteries, veins capillaries).So the important parts are the heart, lungs, and blood vessels or arteries, veins and capillaries
-Capillaries bring blood and nutrients to every cell. They are smaller than your hair. -Veins bring non-oxygenated blood back to the heart, so that the blood can become reoxygenated. -Arteries take the blood straight from your heart. They are very flexible so that they will not break every time the heart pumps blood.
Via Plasma found in the blood of your body :D
The heart and blood vessels are part of the cardiovascular system.
Blood gets pumped to all parts of the body, including the heart.
ventricles takes deoxygenated blood from all parts of the body to the heart while artria suplies oxygenated blood from the heart to all parts of the body
ventricles takes deoxygenated blood from all parts of the body to the heart while artria suplies oxygenated blood from the heart to all parts of the body
The atriums squeeze to push blood to the ventricles, and the ventricles push the blood to separate parts the body.
the ventricles are like pumps in the heart and your pacemaker sends them shocks to keep working. ventricles pump blood into arteries.
The Atria and Ventricles are parts of the heart not the blood. The Atria is the upper chambers of the heart and the Ventricles are the lower chambers of the heart.
The atria Actually, it is the contractions (squeezing) of the ventricles (the lower parts of the heart), not the atria (the upper parts), that do the pumping. That's why the lower part of the heart is larger, and the muscular walls are thicker. The atria receive the blood from the body and pump it down into the ventricles.
The atria Actually, it is the contractions (squeezing) of the ventricles (the lower parts of the heart), not the atria (the upper parts), that do the pumping. That's why the lower part of the heart is larger, and the muscular walls are thicker. The atria receive the blood from the body and pump it down into the ventricles.
The atria Actually, it is the contractions (squeezing) of the ventricles (the lower parts of the heart), not the atria (the upper parts), that do the pumping. That's why the lower part of the heart is larger, and the muscular walls are thicker. The atria receive the blood from the body and pump it down into the ventricles.
yes, they get it back by pumping blood to the 4 parts of your heart. when you inhale, it makes rich blood when you exhale it takes out poor blood which turns into carbon dioxide.
right and left atrium. they collect and hold blood before sending them into the ventricles where they are pumped to all parts of the body.right and left atrium. they collect and hold blood before sending them into the ventricles where they are pumped away from the heart.right and left atrium. they collect and hold blood before sending them into the ventricles where they are pumped to all parts of the body.
The four valves in the heart are: * the two semi-lunar valves - one at the stem of the aorta, the other is found at the trunk of the pulmonary artery. * The tricuspid valve is on the right-hand side of the heart. * The bicuspid valve is on the left side of the heart.
The atria Actually, it is the contractions (squeezing) of the ventricles (the lower parts of the heart), not the atria (the upper parts), that do the pumping. That's why the lower part of the heart is larger, and the muscular walls are thicker. The atria receive the blood from the body and pump it down into the ventricles.