red blood cell is your answer thank you for asking
blood
Respiratory system
Digestive system
No- exhaling removes carbon dioxide from your lungs- along with nitrogen that you had inhaled, and any oxygen that was not transferred to red blood cells.
Lungs, heart, and the circulatory system :)
Yes, oxygen is transferred to the blood via aveolae in the lungs.
oxygen is transferred to the blood by breathing
It (oxygen) enters the lungs, is absorbed by the alveoli in the walls of the lungs, transferred in red blood cells to the heart, where it is pumped into the aorta, then to the arteries and veins and then the capilaries that feed the hair follicles which reside above the temporalis muscle.
When air is inspired, it goes into the lungs, spreads across the alveoli which are like air sacs, and increases the oxygen content in the blood (through capillaries) with the help of hemoglobin. At the same time, carbon dioxide is being transferred into the alveoli by the capillaries used to transfer blood. The oxygen rich blood is sent through the pulmonary vein into the right side of the heart where it is transferred to the rest of the body. Meanwhile, the carbon dioxide that had been collected by the air sacs in the lungs is expired.
If you have 3 liters of air in your lungs and 2 tenths of that is oxygen, how many milliliters of oxygen are in your lungs?
the blood absorb oxygen in the lungs(cappilaries)
blood takes oxygen and gives carbon dioxide to the lungs
Oxygen is transferred to hemoglobin at the alveolar/capillary function. This transfer occurs through diffusion.