Oxygen bonds to the iron in your hemoglobin. Hemoglobin is carried by your red blood cells. If I read your question correctly, You want to know where it leaves the blood; and the answer to that is in the capillaries. From there it diffuses into the cells, into the mitochondria, wherein it disappears (it's turned into water).
its taken in bye by blood
The oxygen is taken from the alveoli in the lungs.
the component taken from your blood when using inhalants is OXYGEN.
Blood is pumped into the lungs and the blood is oxygenated when oxygen is taken into the lungs
Oxygen is brought into the blood stream by inhalation. Carbon dioxide moves out of the cells, into the blood, and taken to the lungs to be exhaled. Oxygen in, carbon dioxide out.
the oxygen in your blood comes from the air you breath in . It goes in through your mouth into the lungs and the oxygen gets taken out from the lungs into the cappilaries.
The blood gets oxygen from the lungs during the process of respiration. Oxygen is inhaled into the lungs, where it diffuses into the bloodstream via tiny air sacs called alveoli. This oxygenated blood is then pumped by the heart to the rest of the body.
Oxygen is the gas that enters the blood during inspiration. It is taken into the lungs from the outside air and then diffuses into the blood vessels in the lungs.
Oxygen is taken up and CO2 is released.
Blood is taken away from the lungs as it circulates.
The oxygen is given by way of diffusion in the capillary system. Oxygen is not taken actively by the cells. So some oxygen is bound to be there in the deoxygenated blood. You have roughly half the oxygen, that comes back in deoxygenated blood.
blood takes oxygen and gives carbon dioxide to the lungs