Blood Flow
Right Side of the Heart
- Blood enters the heart through two large veins, the inferior and superior vena cava, emptying oxygen-poor blood from the body into the right atrium of the heart.
- As the atrium contracts, blood flows from your right atrium into your right ventricle through the open tricuspid valve.
- When the ventricle is full, the tricuspid valve shuts. This prevents blood from flowing backward into the atria while the ventricle contracts.
- As the ventricle contracts, blood leaves the heart through the pulmonic valve, into the pulmonary artery and to the lungs where it is oxygenated.
Left Side of the Heart
- The pulmonary vein empties oxygen-rich blood from the lungs into the left atrium of the heart.
- As the atrium contracts, blood flows from your left atrium into your left ventricle through the open mitral valve.
- When the ventricle is full, the mitral valve shuts. This prevents blood from flowing backward into the atrium while the ventricle contracts.
- As the ventricle contracts, blood leaves the heart through the aortic valve, into the aorta and to the body.
Once blood
travels through the pulmonic valve, it enters your lungs. This is called the
pulmonary circulation. From your pulmonic valve, blood travels to the pulmonary
artery to tiny capillary vessels in the lungs.
Here, oxygen travels from the tiny
air sacs in the lungs, through the walls of the capillaries, into the blood. At
the same time, carbon dioxide, a waste product of metabolism, passes from the
blood into the air sacs. Carbon dioxide leaves the body when you exhale. Once
the blood is purified and oxygenated, it travels back to the left atrium
through the pulmonary veins.
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