Right heart - lungs - left heart - arteries - capillaries - veins - (begin again).
The path a blood cell takes throughout the circulatory system starting at the right atrium and ending at the capillaries is called a ventricle.
Your: heart, atria, left and right ventricles, veins, arteries, capillaries, and blood are the major parts of your circulatory system. Red and white blood cells, platelets, and plasma are components of blood. The path that blood travels throughout the body is through hollow tubes called blood vessels.
a big circle thats yo mamma
Yes, in fact you can see veins on the wings of some flying bugs, such as dragonflies. I also found out that spiders don't have muscles; their blood circulates very swiftly from one leg to the other for them to run.
The circulatory system is like a circle, so there is no real beginning or end. So when you describe it, you could start where ever you want. People often start in the heart, but you could start anywhere along the path. Here is a very simplified path through the circulatory system: Right heart to lungs to left heart to arteries to capillaries to veins and back to right heart.
The blood goes to the ventrume
Nose, Pharynx, Larynx, trachea, bronchi, Lungs, Aveoli, Capillary walls, into blood, Left Atrium, Left Ventricle, Aorta, Body.
from interstitial spaces towards the heart through lymphatic capillaries to lympahtic vessels then to lymphatic nodes then to the right lymphatic duct once in the venous blood, the lymph is then recycled through the body through the circulatory system
the red blood cell will flow through your veins to your right atrium
The circulatory system is made up of the vessels and the muscles that help and control the flow of the blood around the body. This process is called circulation. The main parts of the system are the heart, arteries, capillaries and veins. As blood begins to circulate, it leaves the heart from the left ventricle and goes into the aorta. The aorta is the largest artery in the body. The blood leaving the aorta is full of oxygen. This is important for the cells in the brain and the body to do their work. The oxygen rich blood travels throughout the body in its system of arteries into the smallest arterioles. On its way back to the heart, the blood travels through a system of veins. As it reaches the lungs, the carbon dioxide (a waste product) is removed from the blood and replace with fresh oxygen that we have inhaled through the lungs.
sinus venosus > atrium > ventricle > bulbus arteriosus > ventral aorta > afferent branchial artery > gills > efferent branchial artery > aorta
It is the motion along a circular path.