through arteries
Red blood cells are part of the blood and travel where the blood goes. Blood is moved through the heart to the lungs and back to the heart. Then it is moved through arteries to all the tissues of the body and back to the heart through the veins.
You heart pumps the blood round
because of faduma and salma
A red blood cell traveling through an artery in your leg will first flow through the systemic circulation, moving from the capillaries in the leg into the larger veins, such as the femoral vein. It will then travel through the inferior vena cava, which carries deoxygenated blood from the lower body. The blood cell will return to the heart, entering the right atrium. From there, it will flow into the right ventricle before being pumped to the lungs for oxygenation.
Through both! The pulmonary veins carry oxygenated blood to the heart and then arteries carry it from the heart to the body as a whole. Veins return de-oxygenated blood to the heart.
Blood cells carrying carbon dioxide return to the heart through veins, specifically the superior and inferior vena cava. These veins transport the deoxygenated blood back to the right side of the heart, which then pumps it to the lungs for oxygenation.
The heart is the primary force that moves blood through the body. As the heart contracts and releases the blood is then pumped through the vessels that travel to all areas of the body.
To return blood to the heart and lungs only to provide nutrients and oxygen to the cells of the body through the arteries.
Deoxygenated blood return form the body to the heart via the Superior and Inferior Vena Cavas, which join together to enter the Heart's Right Atrium.
what two things help the blood in veins return to the heart
The inferior and superior vena cavae bring deoxygenated blood back to the heart from the rest of the body. From there it goes through the heart, to the lungs, back through the heart, then to the body.