If the right side of the heart continues to pump faster than the left side of the heart, a patient can go into heart failure. The heart may become enlarged, causing the patient to have a heart attack.
The circulatory system is a closed contiguous circuit. An equal amount of blood needs to flow through both sides of the heart. This would not be true only of there was a fistula between the two sides of the circulatory system such as an atrial or ventricular septal defect.
If the left side of the heart pumped faster than the right side you could not survive. This would lead to a back-up of toxic waste in the body.
I'm not exactly sure, but you can always edit. Nothing happens, or if you're looking for it to be bad, it might cause heart attacks, but like I'd know.
Aorta
The left venricular chamber of the heart is responsible for pumping the blood throughout the body
Pulmonary artery and then on to the lungs.
The entire heart pumps blood. The blood enters the heart via the superior vena cava, is pumped through the heart's right atrium to the right ventricle. Afterwards, it leaves the heart and enters the lungs. The blood is then sent back to the heart where it enters the hearts left atrium. It is pumped to the left ventricle and finally out of the heart to circulate throughout the body.
Blood goes into the right side of the heart from the body then pumped to the lungs for purification( this is when oxygen is mixed with haemoglobin( a substance in the body) to make the blood cleaned, it is then pumped to the left side of the heart were it is transported to every part of the body, then the circulation starts all over again.............
There are 4 chambers of the heart and here are what they do. The Right atria is where blood comes into this part from the vena cava and is pumped to the right ventricle The Right ventricle pumps blood to the lungs Left atria is where the blood returns to the heart through the left atria Left ventricle is where the blood is pumped from the aorta to the rest of the body
Blood moves to the right ventricle where it is pumped to the lungs.
it goes to the lungs and get oxygenated then returns to the heart to be pumped to the body
The oxygen rich blood is usually pumped out of the heart from the left side. It is then pumped to the various parts of the body.
It's a chamber in the heart in which blood flows. It flows through the right atrium and into the right ventricle where it is then pumped into the lungs.
On the right side of the heart there is deoxygenated blood which has already been pumped round the body and is now returning to the heart. On the left side of the heart there is oxygenated blood which has just come from the lungs and is about to be pumped round the body Hope this is useful can't quite renember the names and technical words.. sorry...
veins .the right auricle receives the impure blood through veins . This blood is then pumped to the right ventricle and further pumped to the lungs for oxygenation.