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The oxygenated blood first enters the capillaries, then they carry the blood through other veins to the rest of the body.
Oxygenated blood enters the kidneys through the renal arteries. Blockage of these arteries can affect kidney function as well as blod pressure.
Through the inferior and superior vena cavaThe left atria of the heart is where oxygenated blood enters, it is then pumped to the left ventricle and then to the rest of the body thru the systematic circuit. The heart is separated by the septum, which separates oxygenated and deoxygenated blood.
Arteries and veins carry freshly-oxygenated blood away from the lungs.
Oxygenated blood enters the heart in the pulmonary vein. It passes through the left ventricle, before exiting in the aorta.
Highly oxygenated blood enters the heart via the pulmonary veins into the left atrium of the heart. Veins return to the heart and normally have relatively deoxygenated blood (pulmonary veins are an exception to this rule and have freshly-oxygenated blood) while arteries go away from the heart and have highly oxygenated blood (the pulmonary artery bringing blood from the right ventricle toward the lungs is an exception and has poorly oxygenated blood).
The aorta is an artery, starting near the heart, that pumps freshly oxygenated blood through the body.
it becomes oxygenated
Oxygenated blood or oxygen rich blood.
a little oxygen and a lot of carbon dioxide
De-oxygenated blood is dark red. Oxygenated blood is bright red. Both enter the heart- the former enters the right heart; the latter enters the left heart.
Because the left side of the heart receives the freshly oxygenated blood from the lungs and is connected to the aorta which is your largest artery and delivers all that oxygenated blood to the rest of the body.