Answer:
Taking into account the flow of blood coming from the vena cava, the chambers of the heart through which it flows are the right auricle, right ventricle, left auricle and left ventricle.
Explanation:
In the human being the heart is divided in four chambers, which handle volume and pressure to be able to irrigate the different areas of the body.
The blood that comes from the vena cava is not oxygenated, so it must reach the lungs to receive oxygen and then distribute this gas throughout the body. The heart is the pump that allows the function of transporting blood, and its four chambers are responsible for allowing it.
If we take into account the venous blood that arrives through the vena cava, the route of the blood through each chamber is
- <em><u>Right auricle</u></em><em>, receives the blood from the general venous circulation, and propels it to the adjacent ventricle.</em>
- <em><u>Right ventricle</u></em><em>, from where the blood goes to the lungs through the pulmonary arteries.</em>
- <em><u>Left auricle</u></em><em>, which receives the oxygenated blood through the pulmonary veins.</em>
- <em><u>Left ventricle</u></em><em>, which receives the blood from the left atrium and propels it to the entire body, through the aortic artery and its branches.</em>
The <u>distribution of the heart in chambers allows it to manage an efficient circulatory system</u>, divided into two circuits: the <em>major circulation</em> and <em>minor circulation</em>.