Red blood cells
Red Blood Cells contains hemoglobin and carries oxygen to all cells....
Hemoglobin carries oxygen to the cells and removes carbon dioxide from them. Oxygen binds to the hemoglobin in the lungs and is transported to tissues throughout the body, while carbon dioxide binds to hemoglobin in the tissues and is transported back to the lungs to be exhaled.
Hb (or HB) in anatomy and physiology stands for hemoglobin, a protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen from the lungs to the body's tissues and removes carbon dioxide from them. Hemoglobin also gives blood its red color.
Blood.
Respiration is the process that carries oxygen to the cells and removes carbon dioxide from them. Blood carries the oxygen to the cells.
They carry oxygen to every cell of the body needing oxygen. Red blood cells are just carriers of the protein hemoglobin, which actually carries the iron heme that attaches the oxygen for transport throughout the body.
Carries waste products of cell activity to the kidneys to be removed.
The circulatory system does all this but the blood and plasma are the "part" that you are talking about. The hemoglobin carries the oxygen and some of the waste gas called carbon dioxide but the plasma carries the rest. The plasma is the liquid part of the blood.
hemoglobin removes oxygen from the blood because of certain binding affinity on the 4 quadrants of this protein. The hemoglobin makes it way through your circulatory system where it diffuses into the lungs and out of your mouth during exhalation.
It carries oxygen to the cells and removes carbon dioxide from the body
Haemoglobin carries oxygen around the body, and removes carbon dioxide.
Red blood cells contain hemoglobin, which transports oxygen from the lungs to the body tissues and removes carbon dioxide from the body tissues. Hemoglobin binds to oxygen in the lungs and releases it in other tissues, while also picking up carbon dioxide to be exhaled from the body.