Through the hepatic portal vein, hepatic vein and vena cava.
pulmonary circulation is the circulation of blood between your heart and your lungs
It does not. Arteries bring blood away from the heart and veins bring blood to the heart. In the case of the pulmonary artery, it takes un-oxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs. Oxygenated blood from the lungs is then returned to the heart via the pulmonary vein.
Correct. Blood returning to the right side of the heart has already left the body and returned to the heart to be pumped to the lungs. There it will let go of carbon dioxide and pick up oxygen.
The right side is deoxygenated blood; the left side is oxygenated blood (returned from the lungs).
You may not know this but as well as pumping, your heart also sucks blood back into its' chambers like a vaccum which is how your blood gets returned to your heart.
hepatic artery
pulmonary circulation is the circulation of blood between your heart and your lungs
Return blood, most likely, refers to the venous blood that is returned to the heart.
right atrium
arteries
shut up freak..
Your heart rate decreases and blood is returned to the heart.
Your heart rate decreases and blood is returned to the heart.
Your heart rate decreases and blood is returned to the heart.
inferior vena cava.
It does not. Arteries bring blood away from the heart and veins bring blood to the heart. In the case of the pulmonary artery, it takes un-oxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs. Oxygenated blood from the lungs is then returned to the heart via the pulmonary vein.
The double circulatory system refers to the two loops that the blood follows in the circulatory system. The first loop is the systemic circulation, where oxygenated blood is pumped from the heart to the body tissues and deoxygenated blood is returned to the heart. The second loop is the pulmonary circulation, where deoxygenated blood is pumped from the heart to the lungs for oxygenation and then returned to the heart.