Through diffusion. There is less oxygen in the cells as opposed to the capillaries, so through simple diffusion, the oxygen goes from an area of high concentration to lower concentration.
In the Lungs capillaries switch out oxygen when you hale in, and give CO2 back, which you exhale. From your Lungs oxygen runs trough your whole body. (in the blood)
binds with red blood cells
blood
cold oxygen
oxygen
capillaries
capillaries between the cells in the lungs or the capillaries between the cells in the body
oxygen
Capillaries allow Glucose and oxygen to move out of the blood in the capillaries into interstitial fluid and into the cells. Fluid is exchanged between capillary blood and interstitial fluid.
The are transported round attached to a molecule called haemoglobin, present in the red blood cells. The blood is then pumped round the body by the heart and Carbon Dioxide is replaced for Oxygen in the lungs and the converse in the body's capillaries.
Capillaries - they are the smallest vessels that serve as arteries and veins.
Capillaries. Red cells that group together normally tend to do so in rouleaux; those that stay as individuals will have greater opportunities to absorb oxygen. If they pass through capillaries individually will be more efficient as transporters of oxygen.
Capillaries are very thin blood vessels. Oxygen and nutrients and hormones can pass through the walls of the capillaries and reach the body's cells, while red blood cells remain in the capillaries.
The capillaries exchange oxygen, nutrients, and waste in cells. They accomplish this via diffusion.
wastes i think
wastes