Circulatory System
The circulatory system, which includes the heart, blood vessels, and blood, delivers oxygen and nutrients to muscles and organs throughout the body. The heart pumps oxygen-rich blood to tissues and organs, while the blood vessels transport nutrients and oxygen to cells and remove waste products.
The kidneys pick up waste products and filter them out of the blood, while the circulatory system delivers nutrients to various tissues and organs in the body.
The circulatory system, specifically the cardiovascular system, is responsible for delivering nutrients to cells throughout the body. This system uses blood vessels, such as arteries and capillaries, to transport oxygen and nutrients to cells and remove waste products.
The six major organs fed by the circulatory system include the brain, heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, and intestines. The circulatory system delivers oxygen, nutrients, and hormones to these organs while also removing waste products and carbon dioxide from them.
The digestive system absorbs nutrients from the food and these nutrients are carried to their eventual targets (liver, muscle and fat tissue) within the circulatory system. Digestion requires that the body redirect blood flow towards the digestive system in order to adequately handle the metabolic needs of digestion as well.
delivers oxygen and nutrients, removes waste
delivers oxygen and nutrients, removes waste
Blood carrying oxygen and nutrients
Coronary circulation is a subset of systemic circulation that specifically supplies blood to the heart muscle (myocardium). Systemic circulation, on the other hand, refers to the larger system of blood flow that delivers oxygen and nutrients to all tissues and organs in the body.
The heart is the muscle that functions as the circulatory pump within the body. It is responsible for pumping blood throughout the circulatory system to deliver oxygen and nutrients to the body's tissues and organs.
The organs
skeletal muscle also help with your inner organs.