Scientifically speaking, No. If you had blood anywhere in your body with no oxygen, you would most likely be dead.
There is, however a condition called deoxygenated blood, which occurs mostly in veins that are returning blood to the heart to be pumped to the lungs via the pulmonary arteries to become oxygenated. The difference between oxygenated blood and deoxygenated blood is only about 25%. This means that your blood is always carrying some oxygen, only sometimes at full capacity and sometimes at partial capacity. When it just leaves your lungs, at full capacity, it is carrying its full load at 100%. But when it is returning to the heart and lungs from using up some of its oxygen during metabolism in the body tissues, it is carrying a load of carbon dioxide, which drops its oxygen carrying capacity to 75%. This 75% carrying capacity is called deoxygenated blood.
So, I hope your blood has some oxygen in it!
De-oxygenated blood. (But even this blood has oxygen in it, just not enough)
Blood Cells?
Saliva
oxygen
The name of the blood vessel which supplies glucose and oxygen to the heart muscle is an artery. Arteries carry blood away from the heart.
Blood.
Hemoglobin.
The substance that help the blood carry oxygen is called hemoglobin.
It is actually the name given to the molecule found in the RBCs that is carrying oxygen. It is called oxyhemoglobin.
haemoglobin
one of them is oxygen
The correct name for low levels of oxygen in the blood is hypoxaemia. Low levels of oxygen in the body tissues is called hypoxia
Blood carries oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body. To do this blood cells have a specialized protein that is able to bind oxygen to the blood cell. This protein is known as hemoglobin.