If lactic acid is excreted by the cells, then the blood would become more acidic, and the pH would drop.
If more Carbon Dioxide (CO2) is dissolved in the blood, then more carbon dioxide will mix with water to form:
CO2 + H2O --> H2CO3, Carbonic Acid, and the pH will also drop.
Exercise by muscle cells causes a drop in the pH of the blood, making it more acidotic.
it lowers the PH of your blood plasma and slowly, but still faster then normal, kills off your blood cells
as a doctor for 79 years, i know oxygen oxidizes your fat to body intake of your urinary tracks
it makes you sore
-Decreased pH -Increased Temperature -Increased Pco2
as a doctor for 79 years, i know oxygen oxidizes your fat to body intake of your urinary tracks
enzymes that clot blood
not increase blood pressure
Temperature Dissoved Oxygen pH level
less blood, oxygen and glucose can get to the heart and blood
Breathing rapidly (hyperventilation) or slowly (hyperventilation) are ways the body may become unbalanced or attempt to compensate an imbalanced blood pH. The blood's normal pH is 7.35-7.45. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is acts to acidify the blood (lower the pH). Therefore, hyperventilating (deceasing the CO2 contained in the blood) increases blood pH. Inversely, hypoventilation creates a decline in blood pH.
Regulating the Ph of your blood.
Chemoreceptors
Iron, it helps the blood carry oxygen
Your working muscles can take oxygen out of the blood three times.
Hypoventilation is causes an increase in CO2 (carbon dioxide) in your blood. This is caused by the lack of breathing, or obtaining oxygen, (on the contrary, hyperventilation is when your body is gaining too much oxygen - people tell the hyperventalator to breath in a brown paper bag to allow CO2 to bind to hemoglobin). Thus, when people hypoventilate (i.e. causing an increase in CO2) this causes the pH in your blood to decrease, making it more acidic. (and when hyperventilation occurs, O2 is increased, which causes an increase in pH - making blood more basic).