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Right ventricle
Right ventricle.
The right ventricle pumps blood to the lungs. The blood picks up oxygen in the lungs. It goes from there to the left side of the heart.
Your lungs are around the area of your chest.
No, the blood that your heart pumps to your stomach is not part of the pulmonary circulation loop; it is part of the systemic loop. The pulmonary circulatory loop only travels to the heart and lungs in a circuit, with no other organs included.
Yes. The ventricles are part of the heart, they are the two lower chambers which pump blood around the body by contracting. The right ventricle pumps blood to the lungs and the left ventricle pumps blood to the rest of the body.
right ventricle
Veins take the deoxygenated blood the the right hand side of the heart. The right atrium/auricle (in the heart) pumps blood to the right ventricle(also in the heart), which pumps blood to:The pulmonary arteries. Which take the deoxygenated blood to the Lungs.
The heart is the pump. It pumps the blood regardless of the oxygenation status of the blood. The right side of the heart pumps the deoxygenated blood. Deoxygenated means from which the oxygen is taken away. The left side of the heart pumps the oxygenated blood. Blood gets oxygen and gives away the carbon bi oxide in the lungs. Lungs are specialized organ system to perform the same function.
All four of the heart's chambers squeeze blood out into the corresponding chamber or artery. The right atrium pumps blood from the body into the right ventricle, and the right ventricle pumps that blood out of an artery that leads to the lungs. The blood then returns to the heart and is pumped by the left atrium to the left ventricle, which pumps the blood to the rest of the body.
The right ventricle.
pumanary artery