Ask this in the physics area next time please, but turn to someone you trust or if your young an adult, like your parents or your teachers. Maybe even your friends. No matter what age tell someone and if they don't know then get medical help if they can't.
Noticing patterns in how you respond to situations can help you identify a stressor.
Hope this helps,
Davinia.
Answer:
None of the Above
I don't know
I would personally ask for forgiveness.
Answer:
The correct pathway for oxygen-poor blood is right atrium → right ventricle → pulmonary artery → lungs (first option).
Explanation:
Unoxygenated or oxygen-poor blood is that which comes from tissues that have exchanged O₂ for CO₂. The venous return is in charge of taking that blood to the heart and then to the lungs.
- Oxygen-poor blood reaches the <u>right atrium</u> from the vena cava.
- From the atrium the blood passes to the <u>right ventricle</u> through the tricuspid valve.
- The <u>right ventricle pumps the blood to the lungs</u> through the pulmonary arteries, the only arteries that carry venous blood.
Once in the lungs, the blood exchanges CO₂ for O₂, returning to the heart through the pulmonary veins.
The other options are not correct because:
- <em><u>Left atrium, left ventricle, aorta, body</u></em><em> corresponds to the flow of oxygenated blood that comes from the lungs and is pumped to the entire body.</em>
- <em><u>Left atrium, right atrium, left ventricle, right ventricle</u></em><em> not correspond to the order in which blood flows through the heart.</em>
- <em><u>Right ventricle, right atrium, pulmonary veins, lungs</u></em><em> not correspond to the flow of oxygen-poor blood.</em>
the answer to your question is The autonomic nervous system, it is also called the visceral efferent nervous system, it supplies the motor impulses to cardiac muscle, it also smooths the muscle, and to glandular epithelium. It is further subdivided into sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions.