pulmonary trunk of the heart
aorta
You get deoxygenated or impure blood from the whole body. It enters the right atrium. Right atrium pumps the blood in right ventricle. From right ventricle blood goes to your lungs. Here the blood gets oxygenated or get purified. Then it enters your left atrium. Left atrium pumps the blood in left ventricle. Left ventricle pumps the blood to your whole body.
Blood enters the right atria from the superior and inferior vena cava. Then it flows down into the right ventricle. Then to the lungs. Back to the left atria. Down into the left ventricle and out the the rest of the body.
right atrioventricular valve
there are 4 chambers of the heart. the left and right atrium and the left and right ventricle. the left atrium is where the blood enters the heart and leaves through the left ventricle and the opposite for the only side only to the lungs instead of the body
Deoxygenated blood enters the heart in the right atrium then passes through the TRICUSPID valve to the right ventricle. Then blood leaves the right ventricle through the PULMONARY valve to pick up oxygen and lose CO2 in the lungs. Oxygenated blood leaves the lungs then enters the left atrium. Blood then travels through the MITRAL valve to the left ventricle. Finally the left ventricle expels the oxygenated blood through the AORTIC valve and then out to the body.
right ventricle then on to the pulmonary circulation, to the left atrium, left ventricle then to the body systems back to the right atrium.
left ventricle Blood enters the left & right atria. Blood entering the left ventricle came from the left atrium. Blood from the body enters the right atrium. From there it is pumped to the right ventricle, through the lungs, to the left atrium, to the left ventricle, then throughout the body. Then back to the right atrium...
right ventricle
Blood entering the left ventricle is rich in oxygen. In contrast, oxygen-poor blood enters the right ventricle.
The blood leaving the left ventricle is oxygen-rich and the blood coming out of the right ventricle is oxygen-poor. It then goes through the pulmonary arteries and into the capillaries of the lung where the carbon dioxide is exchanged for oxygen.
Blood from the right ventricle goes through the pulmonic valve and then into the lungs.
You get deoxygenated or impure blood from the whole body. It enters the right atrium. Right atrium pumps the blood in right ventricle. From right ventricle blood goes to your lungs. Here the blood gets oxygenated or get purified. Then it enters your left atrium. Left atrium pumps the blood in left ventricle. Left ventricle pumps the blood to your whole body.
The artery leaving the right ventricle, also called the pulmonary artery, takes blood to the lungs to exchange gas.
The blood then flows into to the right ventricle, and out into the pulmonary artery through the pulmonic valve.
Blood enters the heart from the systemic circulation in the right atrium, and then moves to the right ventricle. From there, blood is pumped into the pulmonary circulation. When the blood returns from the lungs, it enters the left atrium, then left ventricle, then is pumped to body tissues via the systemic circulation.
The right side of the blood receives deoxygenated blood from the systemic (body) circulation. The right atrium receives blood from the systemic veins and pumps it into the right ventricle. At that point, the right ventricle pumps that blood to the lungs.
In the mammalian (and avian) heart, blood passes directly from the atria into the corresponding ventricles. So blood from the right atrium next enters the right ventricle.