Want this question answered?
Arteries and veins carry freshly-oxygenated blood away from the lungs.
Blood carried by the pulmonary arteries is deoxygenated. Blood carried by the pulmonary veins is oxygenated.
It's the only vein that carries oxygenated blood. It brings this oxygenated blood back to the heart (into the left atrium) where it can then be pumped around the body.
Oxygenated blood is carried by all arteries but one which is the pulmonary artery
Arteries
oxygenated blood
Because the left side of the heart receives the freshly oxygenated blood from the lungs and is connected to the aorta which is your largest artery and delivers all that oxygenated blood to the rest of the body.
The first organ to receive oxygen-rich blood would be the heart. The right ventricle pumps de-oxygenated blood to the lungs. The lungs provide oxygen via interaction with capillaries which in turn sends the oxygen-rich blood back to the left atrium which is found in the heart.
Bright red blood because it is already oxygenated.
Taken literally, deoxygenated means "without oxygen," but physiologically it means blood that has dropped its oxygen load to the tissues. There is still oxygen bound to hemoglobin in deoxygenated blood, just not as much as oxygenated blood.
Wow not even close. It's received by the left atrium of your heart.
There are two veins that carry oxygen they are the Pulmonary vein and the Umbilical vein:-)