Deoxygenated blood travels through the veins called the inferior vena cava and superior vena cave into the right atrium. Blood flows from the right atrium, through a valve and into the right ventricle and into the pulmonary arteries. From the pulmonary arteries the blood is carried to the lungs. So the answer is pulmonary artery.
it is the vanes
capilaries
The blood travels through the digital veins, the superficial palmar veins which drain into the cephalic vein, the median cubital vein, the basilic vein, the axillary vein, the subclavian vein, the brachiocephalic vein, and the superior vena cava to go to the right atrium.
It travels to the right ventricle passing through the tricuspid valve. Then it travels to the lungs via pulmonary arteries. The oxygenated blood from the lungs returns to the heart (into the left auricle). From the left auricle the blood travels to the left ventricle. The left ventricle pumps it to aorta. The blood travels through the arteries and veins, then it returns to the right auricle of heart.
The vessel that conveys oxygen-poor blood from the right ventricle is called the pulmonary artery.
The superior vena cava conducts blood from the head to the right atrium.
Vena Cava
Clavicular branch of the thoracoacromial trunk, a branch of the 2nd part of axillary artery, right?
The vessel that carries blood away from the right ventricle is the pulmonary artery. It is responsible for transporting deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs for oxygenation.
superior and inferior vena cave
Pulmonary trunk