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oxygen enters the blood and carbon dioxide
No. Your lungs pass oxygen into the blood and also pass carbon dioxide to the air outside your body. Oxygen combines with carbon to form carbon dioxide. This happens in our muscles, among other places.
the oxygen releases carbon dioxide
the oxygen releases carbon dioxide
Venous blood is loaded with carbon dioxide and low in oxygen Arterial blood is rich in oxygen with little carbon dioxide
Deoxygenated blood is low in oxygen and high in carbon dioxide.
With increased breathing, levels of carbon dioxide in the blood drop and levels of oxygen rise.
It gets rid of carbon dioxide, then it takes the oxygen and gives it to cells. Carbon dioxide is cell waste.
The lung takes carbon dioxide out of your blood and replaces it with oxygen.
The mechanisms for transporting oxygen and carbon dioxide in the blood are the lungs. The blood vessels are also needed for transporting oxygen and dispelling carbon dioxide.
Mostly nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide.
The exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide happens in between the alveoli and then through the walls of the capillaries and then into the blood. The oxygen is then picked up by hemoglobin in the red blood cells and sent to all body cells. While this is happening the carbon dioxide is transported back from the body cells and into the blood. It diffuses through the walls of the capillaries and into the walls of the alveoli. Carbon dioxide leaves your body whenever you breathe out.