The path of blood from the heart to the kidneys is first from the abdominal aorta the blood enters the kidney through the renal artery. Then the renal artery divides into a number of segmental arteries. The segments arteries divide into lobar artery. The lobar arteries divide into inter-lobar arteries that travel between the renal pyramids. The inter-lobar arteries branch into arcuate arteries that travel between the cortex and medulla. From the arcuate arteries the blood is carried into the nephrons. In the nephron the blood enters through the afferent arteriole and into the glomerulus. The blood leaves the glomerulus by the way of the efferent arteriole, which the blood is carried to the peritubular capillaries, and finally to the vasa recta. When the blood reached the vasa recta that means that it had travelled through the whole nephron.
The blood travels back to the heart through the veins. First through the interlobular vain, then through the arcuate vein, then through the interlobar vain, then through the segmental vain, and finally exists the kidney by the way of renal vein, and into the inferior vena cava.
The circuit that the blood follows from the heart to the body's tissues and back is called systemic circulation. It involves the flow of oxygen-rich blood from the heart to the body's tissues through arteries and the return of oxygen-poor blood back to the heart via veins.
Heart to arteries to capillaries to veins.
Beginning with the return of blood to the heart from the systemic circulation, blood enters the right atrium, then the right ventricle, through the pulmonary trunk to the pulmonary arteries and the lungs, through the pulmonary veins, into the left atrium, left ventricle and is then pumped into the aorta.blood enters and exits the heart through the arteries. blood will exit the right atrium through the pulmonary artery and head towards the lungs. once blood is oxygenated by the lungs it will come back to the heart through the coronary artery and enter in the left atrium.
oxygen-poor blood is pumped through the pulmonary arteries to the lungs. gas exchange occurs in the lungs and the oxygenated blood is then returned to the left side of the heart through pulmonary veins
Yes. The difference is as follows- arteries carry oxygenated blood from the heart. Veins carry blood that has been 'de-oxygenated' by the different parts of the body back to the heart to be pumped through the lungs again.
whe blood go's through the heart it get oxganated
The heart is a muscle and it pumps blood to all the body.it pumps the blood in a circlethe heart itself is one. it pumps blood through the body.they contract and pump blood through your body
Blood flows through veins to get to the heart. Arteries are blood vessels for the blood to leave the heart once it has been oxygenated.
The blood flow from the kidney to the diaphragm follows the path of the renal artery carrying oxygenated blood to the kidney for filtration. Once the blood is filtered in the kidney, it travels back to the heart through the renal vein. From the heart, the blood is pumped to the lungs for oxygenation and then circulated to the diaphragm and the rest of the body.
The very famous organ that moves blood through blood vessels is the heart.
blood could not circulate through the body unless it passed through the heart.
The heart pushes blood to your body through the arteries. The blood returns through the veins. The large, flexible artery into which the heart pumps is the aorta.