oxygen
your red blood cells carry oxygen into your body and takes carbon dioxide out
Carbon dioxide enters your body when you inhale air containing it. It is transferred from your lungs into your bloodstream, where it is carried to your body's cells. The cells then exchange carbon dioxide for oxygen through a process called respiration.
When your blood cells go to your lungs to get oxygen, they also release carbon to make room for the oxygen, then when you breath out, the carbon gets into the air.
Red blood cells carry most carbon dioxide wastes away from the cells of the body.
It Brings Carbon Dioxide to The Cells.
Exchange of carbon dioxide and oxygen by cells is part of the respiratory system where oxygen is taken in and carbon dioxide is eliminated. This process occurs through diffusion in the alveoli of the lungs and capillaries surrounding body tissues, allowing cells to receive oxygen for cellular respiration and release carbon dioxide as waste.
Carbon Dioxide
When you exhale, you release carbon dioxide, which is a waste product of cellular respiration in your body. Inhaling oxygen is used by your cells to produce energy, and carbon dioxide is a byproduct that is then expelled when you breathe out.
You breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide. Inhaling brings oxygen into your lungs, which is then absorbed by your blood for use by your body's cells. The carbon dioxide produced by your cells is carried back to your lungs and exhaled out of your body.
carbon dioxide is expelled from cells into the blood stream, carried to the lungs, and exhaled.
When you breathe out, your body gets rid of Carbon Dioxide (CO2).
Internal