Blood leaves the left side of the heart and travels through arteries, which gradually divide into capillaries. In the capillaries, food and oxygen are released to the body cells, and carbon dioxide and other waste products are returned to the bloodstream.
The Deoxygenated blood flows from the body into the right atrium. Oxygenated blood from the lungs flows into the left atrium. Since frogs have only one ventricle, the oxygenated and deoxygenated blood mixes in the ventricle. From there, blood flows into the truncus arteriosus that contains a spiral valve to separate and lead the blood out into the body.
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You might have to look up the following parts but here it goes starting with deoxeginated blood. Ok so the blood with no oxygen(the deoxy is what ill call it) flows from the body superior and inferior vena cava. These vena cavas lead to the right atrium. From the right atrium the blood goes to the right ventricle and is pumped out under low pressure through the pulmanary arteries which lead to the lungs. In the lungs the blood receives oxygen and now flows back to the heart through the pulmanary veins to the left atrium. From there, it goes to the left ventricle and is pumped under high pressure, up to the aorta and then to the rest of the body. It is also pumped down to the apex. I know this isn't the path of the blood through the body but it is through the heart. I can try to explain the path through the body though. Ok so the blood travels around the body in the arteries and eventually lead to the veins. They are connected by something called a cappalary(sorry for misspelling) and then what is written above happens. So hope that helps
If you start at the heart, blood is pumped into the right atrium, then into the right ventricle. This contracts to force blood into the lungs, and it returns into the left atrium. This blood is now oxygenated, and moves into the left ventricle. This is pumped with great pressure into the aorta, which is the biggest artery in the body. This newly oxygenated blood travels to capillary beds, where it 'unloads' the oxygen and then blood travels back to the heart via the veins, which all connect and lead to the vena cava, the biggest vein in the body. This feeds blood into the right atrium, and the whole process starts again!
The heart pumps 5 litres of blood per minute, but this goes up alot if you are exercising.
The path is very complicated. The blood circulation is divided into large and small circulations.
The main ones are the circulation from your heart to your brain, and from your heart to your lungs. The medium circulation irrigates your organs, and the small circulation is the peripheral one which feeds your skin. There is also a circulation in your brain that is constituted of capillaries. If you are interested to know the total pathways of circulation consult Wikipedia and you'll see how complex it is. Just type "Blood circulation."
when a heart contracts and forces blood into the blood vesles, there is a certain path that the blood follow through the body
the blood vessels, obviously
which part completes the path of blood in whole body(systemic)circulation
carry the blood through the body and path way is capaliries heart and viens
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
The blood goes to the ventrume
The path that food takes to get out of the small intestine and into the blood is through the body cells. When food is broken down in the stomach, nutrients are absorbed through the intestinal walls. The nutrients cross the mucosa into the bloodstream where they are transported to other parts of the body.
The heart pumps blood through the body.
The heart pumps blood through the body.
the blood runs through your body and in to your heart
Oxygen does not push blood through the body, the heart does.
Pulmonary circulation is the exchange of blood between the heart and the lungs. Systemic circulation is the the exchange of blood between the heart and the body overall
The heart pumps blood through the lungs and through the rest of the 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