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Oxygen molecules are bound to the red pigment HEMOGLOBIN, a protein complex found exclusively in red blood cells. A very small amount of oxygen is also dissolved in the liquid portion of blood, but hemoglobin carries the bulk of oxygen.
Oxygen is needed for respiration. This is how all our cells release energy. All the body cells and white blood cells therefore need oxygen. Red blood cells don't use oxygen, they undergo anaerobic respiration, but they transport the oxygen needed by other cells.
There are no "solids" because they're all in solution; the closest you might come is the membranes of the various blood cells, and/or the (temporarily) unconnected fat molecules that are normally fastened to various transport proteins.
The red blood cells carry the oxygen in blood.
Because your cells need oxygen. Blood has Hemoglobins inside it, which carry oxygen.
no oxygen is in your red blood cells
Blood carries oxygen and various nutrients (glucose, electrolytes, etc.) to your cells.
Blood carries nutrients e.g. glucose and oxygen to cells
Oxygen is moved through the body, bounded to hemaglobine (red blood cells). Glucose is moved through the blood.
energy
Glucose affects red blood cells by helping them carry oxygen. This is all done in a response to the insulin entering the body.
oxygen and glucose
Your blood supplies many important things to your cells. Mainly it supplies oxygen and nutrients, such as glucose.
Blood.
oxygen and glucose
oxygen is used up in respiration.
Oxygen (which we breathe in from the air) and Glucose (a sugar which we get form our food)Both oxygen and glucose are carried around the body via the blood