exterior jugular , interior jugular subclavian, brachioceplanic, aortic arch, superior vena cava
Trace a drop of blood from the left knee to the right arm
Why would you want to do that. You would have to cut open the heart and watch the blood move from the pulmonary artery through the heart and into the right radial artery.
The answer starts with Aortic arch to left brachiocephalic trunk to left common carotid to left external carotid to left occipital artery.
Right atrium > right ventricle > pulmonary artery > lung > pulmonary vein > left atrium > left ventricle > aorta > arteries > arterioles > capillaries > venules > veins > vena cava > right atrium (again)
A person can trace the blood flow from the left coronary artery to the apex of the heart and to the right atrium, by following inter ventricular artery. Blood also will move through the pulmonary semi lunar valve.
From the bicuspid valve, blood travels to the left ventricle. From there, it's pumped to the aorta and throughout the body.
The ventrice carries blood with oxygen. The blood flows to the aorta valve, aortic arch, descending aorta, left iliac arteries, ovarian arteries and to the Ovary.
i cnt trace it cuz this is a writing answer but the unoxygnated blood comes down through veins into the right atrium and out the right ventricle it passes the aveoli goes through the left atrium and out the left ventricle through the aorta and eventually into small capilaries
One drop of blood starts in the right atrium -> tricuspid valve-> Rt ventricle -> pulmonary valve -> Pulmonary artery -> lungs where oxygen is picked up and carbon dioxide is dropped off -> Pulmonary vein -> left atrium -> bicuspid valve -> left ventricle -> Aortic valve -> Aorta and then out to the body tissues and systemic circulation. This circuit is called the pulmonary circuit.
Blood flows from the heart to the arteries and then from the arteries to the
The blood flows from the left ventricle into elastic arteries (aortic trunk), then to the muscular arteries (external carotid artery), then to arterioles, then to the capillary beds.
Let's start from the heart. The blood drop goes out through the aorta, to other, smaller arteries. Arterioles. Capillaries. Venoules. Veins. Back to the heart (right atrium). From the right atrium, it goes to the right ventricle, to the pulmonary artery, to the lungs, into the pulmonary veins, which bring it to the left atrium of the heart. It then moves to the left ventricle, and out again through the aorta. Note that the drop of blood you started out with would not be the same drop you ended up with.