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The red blood cells carry the oxygen in blood.
with a chemical asphyxiant there may be plenty of oxygen in the air, but it (oxygen) is unable to attach to the blood cells; and with a simple asphyxant there is not enough oxygen in the atmospheric environment
Red blood cells in blood carry oxygen throughout the body. The actual chemical substance in red blood cells that carries oxygen is hemoglobin. Hemoglobin also carries carbon-dioxide when passed through capillarys, the part where the carbon dioxide is exchanged with the oxygen. capillaries are a cell thick for the lower blood presure.
After the mouth (or nose), oxygen (as part of the air) goes down your trachea, into the bronchi, and through the bronchioli, into the alveoli, where it enters the blood and gets taken via the blood to the various parts of your body.
the blood absorb oxygen in the lungs(cappilaries)
The red blood cells carry the oxygen in blood.
Blood gets oxygen in the cells. This is part of the body system.
The hemoglobin molecule is what the oxygen molecule will attach to in the red blood cell.
ways of transporting oxygen (presumably in the human body you are referring to) it is carried in the blood as part of the circulatory system-it is picked up from the lungs through alveoli -majorly carried in the blood as oxyhaemoglobin (oxygen combined with haemoglobin in red blood cells) -some can be dissolved in the blood plasma
Hemoglobin.
The only part of the blood which carries oxygen are the red blood cells. These blood cells contain what is known as hemoglobin, which is the most efficient part of the cell, and the only part of the cell, that can carry oxygen.
It delivers oxygen to every part of the body.
Blood transport oxygen.
Blood transport oxygen.
it is the blood cells in your blood that contain and carry oxygen around the body
Erythrocytes are red blood cells, and they transport oxygen through the veins by use of hemoglobin--an iron containing protein, brought together from two polypeptides modified after ribosomal construction, that oxygen can attach to.
Iron is needed to produce haemoglobin, which is the part of the blood that carries oxygen throughout the body. A lack of haemoglobin means less oxygen available to be utilised by cells for energy