heart pumps blood to the lungs for oxygenation.
The right side of the heart receives blood which has passed through the body and needs to be returned to the lungs for re-oxygenation.
Through the superior and inferior vena cavae.
the blood is pumped to the lungs in order to get oxygen and become oxygenated and thus supply the body cells and tissues with oxygen
So it can drop off its load of carbon dioxide and pick up oxygen on its way back to the heart to then get pumped to the rest of the body.
The right ventricle
It does so via the right ventricle.
It ain't.
oxygenated blood so that the heart can then pump it out to the body
Blood moves to the right ventricle where it is pumped to the lungs.
The heart does not specifically pump to any organ, it pumps blood threw the circulatory system. The "Pulmonary side" of the cardiac circulation is the "right" side of the heart which pumps blood TO the lungs. Therefore all the parts of the heart which are on the right side would be considered the answer.
Arteries drain (pump blood) into veins. Veins drain into your lungs and heart to be re-oxygenated. (This is not true for veins and arteries to and from your lungs.)
If one has fluid in their lungs it probably means they have Congestive Heart Failure (CHF). This is a problem in which the heart cannot pump blood to the other organs.
Answer Pump blood to the lungs.
blood that is being pump from the heart to the lungs is oxygen.
Heart.
pump
Yes, the heart does pump blood to the lungs. It supplies all regions of the body with blood.
oxygenated blood so that the heart can then pump it out to the body
pulmonary artery, to the lungs capillaries where the blood is oxygenated
The heart is a pump that moves all blood in the body.
right ventricle
the heart does not give the body it's oxygen it is the lungs. The heart is used to pump the blood to the lungs to pick up oxygen and then to pump the blood throughout the body and add oxygen to the blood cells.
lungs and other blood vessels
oxygen