How Blood Moves Through Your Body
Your heart acts like a pump, imagine pushing juice from one straw to another, making it go whoosh all around! The blood vessels are like straws: big ones called arteries, medium ones called veins, and tiny ones called capillaries that deliver the juice right into your cells.
What Makes Blood Flow?
Your heart gives blood a push, sending it through arteries. When it reaches the end of the journey, it goes back through veins, like a return trip on a different straw. The capillaries are super tiny and stretchy, letting blood flow in and out easily, so your cells can get what they need.
Sometimes, if a straw gets clogged or kinked (like when you squish a juice box), the flow slows down, that’s like having harder work to get energy to your legs or brain! But with every beat of your heart, it all keeps going, just like juice being pushed through straws.
Examples
- A heart pumps blood like a water pump in a house.
- Red blood cells deliver oxygen, and veins bring it back home.
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See also
- How the heart actually pumps blood - Edmond Hui?
- How Does Blood Vessels Explained: Arteries, Veins Work?
- How Does The Human Body: The Heart | Educational Videos For Kids Work?
- How Does Circulatory System and Pathway of Blood Through the Heart Work?
- How Does Blood Flow through the Heart in 2 MINUTES Work?