the first loop is lungs to the heart. the second loop is body to the heart.
The blood vessels of the body are functionally divided into two distinctive circuits: pulmonary circuit and systemic circuit. The pump for the pulmonary circuit, which circulates blood through the lungs, is the right ventricle. The left ventricle is the pump for the systemic circuit, which provides the blood supply for the tissue cells 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.
The heart pumps blood through the lungs and through the rest of the body
Because the arteries wouldn't be able to have blood flow through your body unlike arteries veins are through out your whole body so they can transport blood through your whole body, veins keep your blood circulating
The heart pumps blood through the body.
By your heart pumping the blood through your veins.
Veins carry the blood throughout the body. It's Where The Blood Travels Through.
They work a bit like a thermostat that keeps a constant temperature in a house. Negative feedback loops work through receptors, which sense a change such as in blood pressure. Signals are then sent to the control centres, usually in the brain, which then give instructions to the effectors - mechanisms which then regulate conditions such as blood pressure and bring it back to normal
The aorta is the largest artery in the body. An artery transports blood away from the heart, whereas a vein transports blood toward the heart. The aorta begins at the left ventricle of the heart, and nearly all the blood pumped by the heart passes through it. The aorta is about as thick as a garden hose. The aorta loops over the heart before moving downward through the trunk of the body, in a "candy cane" shape. Many other arteries branch off from the aorta to supply blood to all the parts of the body.