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The coronary veins drain into the coronary sinus, which in turn drains into the right atrium.
coronary sinus...cause it empties blood into the right atrium
The coronary veins drains the unoxygenated blood and empty it into the coronary sinus, which empties into the right atrium.
Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium
There are no vessels that drain the right atrium, except, perhaps the coronary veins. The right atrium moves blood through the tricuspid valve into the right ventricle of the heart.
The coronary sinus opens into the right atrium, between the inferior vena cava and the superior vena cava.It returns the blood from the substance of the heart, and is protected by a ... Its wall is partly muscular, and at its junction with the great coronary vein is ... groove between the left atrium and ventricle on the posterior surface of the heart. ...
The Great Coronary Vein drains the muscles of the heart. It ascends the anterior interventricular sulcus (groove between the two ventricles) around the left coronary groove (groove between the left atrium and left ventricle) and into the coronary sinus on the right atrium of the heart.
The great cardiac vein is one of the largest veins in the body. It is located in the heart, leading away from the coronary sinus. It's function is to lead blood that has had the oxygen removed from it away from the heart.
Three vessels drain into the right atrium, the Ascending vena cava, the descending vena cava and the coronary sinus.
The Mitral Vein is one of those osbcure little veins that you do not often hear about. The Heart itself requires a blood supply, which comes from the Coronary Arteries and a system called the Cardiac supply. The blood is, as usual, supplied by arteries and must be removed in veins. These veins drain (mostly) into the Coronary Sinus which drains directly into the Right Atrium (the veins that bypass the sinus also drain directly into the right atrium). The mitral vein drains the supply from the region around the Mitral Valve (the valve between the Left Atrium and the Levt Veintricle) and it in turn drains directly into the coronary sinus. In the left side of the heart, near the Mitral, or bicuspid, valve.
Rigth atrium receives unoxygenated blood from superior vena cava and inferior vena cava. from rigth Atrium blood drains to the rigth ventricle through tricuspid valve. Atrium function as prime pumps.
is a collection of veins joined together to form a large vessel that collects blood from the myocardium of the heart. It is present in humans and other animals. It receives blood mainly from the small, middle, great and oblique cardiac veins. It also receives blood from the left marginal vein and the left posterior ventricular vein. The anterior cardiac veins drain directly into the right atrium. (Some small veins drain into any of the four chambers of the heart.) It drains into the right atrium on the posterior, inferior surface, medial to the inferior vena cava opening.