right and left iliac arteries
Aorta>celiac trunk a>common hepatic a>proper hepatic a>capillary bed of liver>hepatic v>inferior vena cava>left atrium>bicuspid>left ventricle>aorta>semilunar>pulmunary artery>lungs>Pulmunary vein>right atrium>tricuspid>right ventricle>aorta>semilunar valve.
starting from the Veins Vein (unoxygenated) (e.g Inferior Vena cava) > right atrium > right ventricle > Pulmonary truck > Pulmonary Arterys > Lungs (to become oxygenated) > Pulmonary Veins (now oxygenated) > left Atrium > left ventricle > aorta > to the arteries in the body > arterioles > capillaries > venules > veins (where the oxygen is again replaced by coz and is thus unoxygenated) (the cycle repeats itself)
Oxygen rich blood from the lungs enters the heart through the left atrium in order for your heart to pump the blood to other areas of the body. The aorta pumps the oxygenated blood to the rest of the body.
The abdominal cavity is actually a subsection of the abdominal pelvic cavity. There are not 9 cavities. There are 9 abdominal regions: Right hypochondriac, Epigastric, Left Hypochondriac, Right Lumbar, Umbilical, Left Lumbar, Right Iliac, Hypogastric andLeft Iliac
The first thing is to determine what artery provides blood to the lower right first molar. The lower teeth sit in the mandible and are supplied by branches of the The major artery in the mandible supplying the teeth is the inferior alveolar artery, which sends branches to supply the roots of each tooth (including the first molar) in the lower jaw. Next is to find the origin of the inferior alveolar artery and work backwards until we get to the ascending aorta. The inferior alveolar artery is a branch of the internal maxillary artery, which itself is a branch of the external carotid artery. The external carotid artery is a branch of the common carotid artery. So far everything has been symmetrical, so it hasn't mattered whether we specified that the artery was on the right or the left side. But the common carotid arteries behave a little differently. The right common carotid is a branch of the innominate artery, which branches from the aortic arch. The left common carotid artery branches directly from the aortic arch. Since we're concerned with the lower right first molar, we'll work backwards from the right common carotid, innominate artery, and aortic arch. The last bit is just to know that the aortic arch is an extension of the ascending aorta. With that, we're done. Now we just sew the whole thing together, artery by artery, in the reverse order: Ascending aorta -> aortic arch -> innominate artery -> right common carotid artery -> right external carotid artery -> right internal maxillary artery -> right inferior alveolar artery -> branch to lower right first molar.
Left and right iliac
The inferior vena cava
Right Femoral Artery -> Right External Iliac Artery -> Right Common Iliac Artery -> Abdominal Aorta -> Aorta -> Right Coronary Artery I think below is a better answer: R Femoral A. > R Ext. Iliac > R Common Iliac > Abdominal Aorta> Thoracic Aorta > Aortic Arch
The superior and inferior vena cava.
Those in the Thoracic Cavity are the heart and lungs. ' The Abdominal Cavity holds the digestive organs.
branches of abdominal aorta are classified into three. these are : ventral branches, dorsal branches and lateral branches. ventral branch consists of : coeliac artery (at T12 vertebral level ). superior mesenteric artery(at L1 level). inferior mesenteric artery(at L3 level). dorsal branch consists of : right and left lumbar arteries. median sacral artery. lateral branches consists : right and left inferior phrenic arteries. right and left suprarenal arteries. right and left renal arteries. right and left gonadal arterries. terminal branches are right and left common illiac arteries.
pulmonary
The aorta is usually divided into five segments/sections:Ascending aorta: the section between the heart and the arch of aortaArch of aorta-the peak part that looks somewhat like an inverted "U"Descending aorta-the section from the arch of aorta to the point where it divides into the common iliac arteriesThoracic aorta-the half of the descending aorta above the diaphragmAbdominal aorta-the half of the descending aorta below the diaphragm
The superior vena cava.
Six large veins carry blood to the heart: the superior vena cava and inferior vena cava carry blood from the body to the right atrium, and four pulmonary veins carry blood from the lungs to the left atrium. Two arteries, the pulmonary trunk and the aorta, exit the heart. The pulmonary trunk, arising from the right ventricle, splits into the right and left ventricle, carries blood to the rest of the body.
This is hard to answer with the way you ask. We have tha aorta coming out of the heart, then the brachiocephalic, left common carotic, and right subclavian artery coming off that. If you are asking which is at top, well that's still hard to answer, but I would say the brachiocephalic. That splits into the right subclavian and right common carotid arery.
Right femoral artery, right external iliac artery, right common iliac artery, abdominal aorta, thoracic aorta, descending aorta, aortic arch, ascending aorta, right coronary artery.