Biology, asked by tia4204, 1 year ago

heart working system

Answers

Answered by meeragupta0029
2

The heart is a muscular organ which is  as big as our fist . Because  both oxygen and carbon dioxide have to  be transported by the blood, the heart  has different chambers to prevent the  oxygen-rich blood from mixing with the  blood containing carbon dioxide. The  carbon dioxide-rich blood has to reach  the lungs for the carbon dioxide to be  removed, and the oxygenated blood from  the lungs has to be brought back to the  heart. This oxygen-rich blood is then  pumped to the rest of the body.  We can follow this process step by  step . Oxygen-rich blood from  the lungs comes to the thin-walled upper  chamber of the heart on the left, the left atrium. The left atrium relaxes  when it is collecting this blood.

It then contracts, while the next chamber,  the left ventricle, relaxes, so that the blood is transferred to it. When the

muscular left ventricle contracts in its turn, the blood is pumped out to

the body. De-oxygenated blood comes from the body to the upper

chamber on the right, the right atrium, as it relaxes. As the right atrium

contracts, the corresponding lower chamber, the right ventricle, dilates.

This transfers blood to the right ventricle, which in turn pumps it to the

lungs for oxygenation. Since ventricles have to pump blood into various

organs, they have thicker muscular walls than the atria do. Valves ensure

that blood does not flow backwards when the atria or ventricles contract.

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