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valves in the heart are at the opening of the right and left auricle,poening of the right and left venticle and the closing of the right and left ventricle
left and right atriums left and right ventricles
Cuspid valves are right and left atrioventricular (AV) valves.
To determine the right and left valves of the clam, put the valve in your hand with the nacre facing you and the beak pointing up. If the beak is toward the right, it is the left valve, and if it is toward the left, it is the right valve.
No because the valves present between the right atria and left atria (interartrial valves ) and the valves present between the right ventricle and left ventricle (interventricular valve ) allow the unidirectional flow of blood only ;
The valves in the heart are:Between the right atrium and the right ventricle is the tricuspid valve.Between the left atrium and the left ventricle is the bicuspid valve.In the pulmonary artery and aorta are the semi lunar valves.
your semi lunar valves stop slop from entering your left aorta and your lunar valves stop crud from entering your right ventricle. this is the purpose of your valves. but this is different in dogs as your septum helps fight against testicular torsion.
4 chambers are 1. right atria 2.right ventricle 3.left atria 4 left ventricle 4 values are 1.tricuspid valves in between the right atria and right ventricle 2.mitral valve or bicuspid valves in between the left atria and left ventricle 3.Aortic valves 4.pulmonary valve
for the right atrium and right ventricle, the tricuspid valve separates the two. For the left, the mitral valve separates the two.
Sorry your question is not understandable, please make another
No, it flows from the Right Atrium to the Right Ventricle then to the Left Atrium to the Left Ventricle. Hope this helps!
You're better off with a diagram, but I'll try... Blood enters from the right through the vena cava into the right atrium. The tricuspid valves let it into the right ventricle. From there the semilunar valves let it into the pulmonary artery. From there it goes to the lungs, and returns, oxygenated, in the pulmonary vein, entering on the far left. It goes into the left atrium and then is let into the left ventricle by the bicuspid valves. From there it goes through the semilunar valves to the aorta and from there to the rest of the body.