Want this question answered?
The heart chambers are not called arteries and veins. Heart chambers are atria and ventricles.
The heart chambers are called atria and ventricles. Arteries and veins are blood vessels.
the ventricles or arteries
Veins, arteries or valves
Ventricle
left ventricle-aorta-arteries-arterioles-capillaries-veins-vena cava-right atrium-right ventricle-pulmonary artery-lungs-pulmonary vein-left atrium!:)
they are the right and left ventricle
the chambers in the heart are called venticles and atriums. You have a left and a right venticle and a left and a right atrium.
I'll start with deoxygenated blood. vena cava-->right atrium-->right ventricle-->pulmonary artery-->capillary beds in lungs for co2/o2 exchange (blood is now oxygenated) -->pulmonary vein-->left atrium-->left ventricle-->aorta-->capillary beds of organs (blood now is again deoxygenated and returns to vena cava. The vasculature becomes increasingly smaller as blood reaches the capillarries, then increasingly larger as it leaves the capillaries. Away from heart--aorta, arteries, arterioles Towards heart--vena cava, veins, venules Source--I'm a current physiology student
Myocardium is a type of muscle tissue. The reason why the myocardium receives its blood from coronary arteries and not from the cardiac chambers is because the blood from the cardiac chambers does not contain oxygen and nutrients.
The left ventricle of the heart. The powerful left ventricle has thicker walls then the other chambers of the heart because it pumps blood throughout the body. From the left ventricle, the blood is pumped into the aorta. The aorta branches forming arteries serve all parts of the body
the left atrium and left ventricle are the heart chambers which pumps blood toward the artery. . . xD