ChatterBank1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You would not expect all blood cells leaving the heart at a particular time to make the same "round trip" back to the heart. As it flows the blood is forced to split up and travel down thousands of vessels, some linking back to the heart fairly directly, and some leading right to the body's extremities and back again. Clearly, then, there is going to be a wide range of possible values for any given blood cell's circulation time. Even blood cells that are adjacent to each other when they leave the heart and travel along the exact same arteries and veins could still arrive back at the heart at quite different times. This "smearing" effect suggests that 60 seconds might be an approximate minimum time for a complete heart > heart cycle, while 15 minutes can be considered roughly maximum. In reality you would of course get an average circulation time which would correspond to the time when the blood that has left the heart is re-entering it at its maximum rate. (Normal distribution.)