Have you ever taken a step back and asked how it is constructed? It is axiomatic that the heart, aka myocardium, is the most important muscle in the body. When analyzing the heart we should bifurcate the way we look at it into halves; the right side pumps deoxygenated blood to the lungs and the left side pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of the body. The dual pump action is consisted of chambers, of which are two upper atria and two lower ventricles.
Think about it as a complex network of circulatory passageways that requires specific blood flows to go in specific directions. This is known as the Peripheral Circulatory System. Imagine a series of highways, tunnels, and roads consisted of veins, arteries, and capillaries. Like a transportation system, blood flow can either be in both directions or just be one way. There are controls that ensure the right system of circulation. The strength our heart and circulatory blood flow is critical to our health. The atrium receives blood from the veins and pushes it to the ventricles, and then the ventricles pump it to the arteries. Arteries are muscle-walled tubes that provided for ease of circulation. Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels that supply cells with oxygen and nutrient. They are blood vessels that form a network between arteries and venules (veins). Blood travels from capillaries to venules, which ultimately become veins. Veins are tubes that carry oxygen depleted blood towards the heart. For instance, large arteries (conducting arteries) deliver large quantities of blood within the vascular system to larger segments. A medium artery (distributors) regulates the area of the tissue and determines the blood flow through dilation and constrictive controls. The small arteries help control blood flow, as an extension of the medium arteries. Important components of the heart include the following:
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