organsblood
Organsblood is not a formal term in human physiology, but it is sometimes used to refer to the portion of circulating blood that perfuses individual organs during normal physiology or medical intervention. In this sense, it describes organ-specific blood flow—the delivery of oxygen, nutrients, and immune cells to tissues via arterial blood and its return to the heart through the venous system.
Organ perfusion is governed by cardiac output and regional autoregulation. Different organs receive varying shares of
Clinical relevance centers on maintaining adequate organ perfusion to prevent dysfunction. In anesthesia, critical care, and
Terminology note: the term organsblood is informal and not widely adopted in physiology. Standard concepts include