The blood in the aortic arch primarily supplies the head, neck, and upper limbs through major branches, including the brachiocephalic trunk, left common carotid artery, and left subclavian artery. From the aortic arch, oxygen-rich blood flows to the right arm and head via the brachiocephalic trunk, while the left common carotid and left subclavian arteries deliver blood to the left side of the head and left arm, respectively. After branching off, the blood continues to circulate through the respective arteries, supplying oxygen and nutrients to these regions.
blood travels from the ascending aorta to the aortic arch to the descending aorta
left venatricle pumps the blood in to aorta rapidly 75% blood is pumped : aorta divides in to artries which
the descending arota receives blood from the arotic arch/ ascending arota.
If you are talking about where does the blood inside the descending aorta come from, it comes from the aortic arch, which comes from the ascending aorta. If you are talking about the blood that nourishes the tissues of the aorta, it is the vasa vasorum.
From mitral valve the blood will go to left ventricle. From there, the blood will go to ascending aorta. Then arch of aorta. Then descending aorta. Then abdominal aorta. Then to common iliac artery. then to external iliac artery. Which continue as the femoral artery. Then popliteal artery. Then posterior tibial artery. Then medial and lateral planter arteries. Then the branches will go to your great toe.
myocardium of the heart
The ventrice carries blood with oxygen. The blood flows to the aorta valve, aortic arch, descending aorta, left iliac arteries, ovarian arteries and to the Ovary.
To travel from the aorta to the left, or right, occipital lobe, it would have to go through the aortic arch, common carotid artery, external carotid artery, then occipital artery.
Why would you want to do that. You would have to cut open the heart and watch the blood move from the pulmonary artery through the heart and into the right radial artery.
ascending aorta arch of aorta thoracic aorta abdominal aeorta
The aorta is the large blood vessel that comes out of your heart and contains the blood that has been oxygenated in your lungs and is ready to go to the rest of your body. It is one big tube with smaller arteries coming off of it until it needs to split in two to reach the legs, at which point it becomes the two femoral arteries. The aorta is shaped a bit like a question mark. Get out a piece of paper and a pencil, and start by drawing a short (a couple of inches) vertical line in the middle of the page. Now from the top of that line, continue it in an arch curving up and to the right, then back toward the middle of the page, then down, like a question mark. The line that goes up at the beginning is the ascending aorta, the middle more horizontal part is the arch, and when it turns and comes back down, it is the descending aorta.
Brachiocephalic Trunk,Left common Carotid artery,left subclavian artery