In the right side of your heart, de-oxygenated
blood from your body is coming to heart through Vena
Cava
(a vein) and enters right atrium. Then it's pumped to the right ventricle where it leaves through pulmonary artery (which
leads to the lungs, where blood is getting oxygenated).
The right ventricle of a heart.
The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs, and the left side pumps blood to the rest of the body. The blood on the right side is deoxygenated and the blood on the left side is oxygenated.
The Tricuspid Valve (Right side) and the Bicuspid valve (left side) open to let blood flow to the heart.
It is left auricle in heart which receives blood from the lung.
It is the flow of CO2-carrying blood from the right side of the heart, to the lungs for oxygenation and back to the left side of the heart for distribution throughout the body.
PULMONARY ARTERY
the Right side
through veins connected to the heart that lead all over the body
Human heart pumps the blood all around the body. The left side of the heart is thicker than then the right side because the left side has to pump the blood all around the body or shall I say long distance from heart. The right side don't require thick muscles as it just have to pump the blood to the adjacent lung. Veins contain valves which prevents the back flow of the blood and thus help the flow of blood around the whole body.
The right side of the heart receives blood from the body. The left side receives blood from the lungs.
The right side of your heart pumps blood through your lungs.
the right side of the heart contains deoxygenated blood.