coronary sinus
coronary sinus...cause it empties blood into the right atrium
Systemic circulation is the flow of blood from the left side of the heart, through the tissues of the body excepting pulmonary tissues, and emptying into the right atrium of the heart. Pulmonary circulation is the flow of blood from the right side of the heart through the lungs to become freshly oxygenated and empties into the left atrium.
pylorus
The Pulmonary Artery which takes the deoxygenated blood to the lungs.
Renal Pelvis
To help fight disease!
coronary sinus
Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium Coronary sinus, in turn empties into the right atrium
No. The superior vena cava returns blood from the superior regions of the body to the right atrium. the coronary arteries supply the heart with oxygenated blood.
right atrium
coronary sinus
coronary sinus
the right atrium
The coronary veins drains the unoxygenated blood and empty it into the coronary sinus, which empties into the right atrium.
coronary sinus...cause it empties blood into the right atrium
Deoxygenated blood from the lower body travels through the Inferior Vena cave. Deoxygenated blood from the upper body travels through the Superior Vena Cave. Both vessels empty into the Right Atrium.
Yes. Deoxygenated blood (venous blood) can mix with arterial blood in a few different manners: the thebesian circulation perfuses the left ventricle and then empties with the oxygenated (arterial blood); blood that supplies pulmonary tissue with oxygen empties into pulmonary veins (which carry newly oxygenated blood); atelectatic or collapsed alveoli; other congenital problems (septal defects).