Wastes are carried to the kidneys, the liver, and the skin. Depending on which organ can process them, the wastes are eliminated there.
Blood in the blood vessels
nitrogenous waste is carried through the blood. the waste passes into the nephrons (kidney cells) inside the nephrons the blood passes through "the loop of henly" in which the waste is pulled out of the blood and send to the bladder to be concentrated as urea
Three substances transported by blood are nutrients, oxygen, and waste from cells.
Red blood cells carry most carbon dioxide wastes away from the cells of the body.
The metabolic waste products of the body are carried to the kidneys by the blood.
Carbon monoxide a waste product found in cigarette smoke is more readily absorbed by the red blood cells than oxygen. This reduces the ability of the red blood cells in transporting oxygen around the body.
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is probably the most important.
The blood is mainly made of Platelets, Red Blood Cells, and White Blood Cells. The red blood cells carry oxygen and carbon dioxide. Nutrients are carried through the blood, and waste is taken away via the blood. Hormones also pass through the blood.
nitrogenous waste is carried through the blood. the waste passes into the nephrons (kidney cells) inside the nephrons the blood passes through "the loop of henly" in which the waste is pulled out of the blood and send to the bladder to be concentrated as urea
The blood. For oxygen specifically, the hemoglobin or red blood cells. "Food" per se does not travel around the body at all; our stomachs and intestines break down the food we eat into simple sugars, starches and proteins, which then are picked up by the blood and carried around with the oxygen.
The heart pumps blood, and also the plasma that, with the blood cells, make up the volume of the circulatory system. The red blood cells dump carbon dioxide (CO2, which they picked up from the cells of the body) in the lungs, and pick up oxygen (O2) there. The oxygen is carried to the cells and exchanged there for the carbon dioxide. (The cells need the O2 and excrete the CO2.) There's a bit more. The blood also contains the plasma, which carries the nutrients the cells of the body need. The nutrients are collected from the digestive system and carried in the plasma. That plasma also carries the waste products of the cells to the liver and kidneys so it can be "pulled out" and disposed of.
There are a number of waste products carried by the blood and then to the skin, lungs and kidneys. Kidneys: urine, excess water and salts. Lungs: carbon dioxide and a small amount of water. Skin: Excess water and salts.
Three substances transported by blood are nutrients, oxygen, and waste from cells.
Red blood cells carry most carbon dioxide wastes away from the cells of the body.
No, it is carried through the veins.
The metabolic waste products of the body are carried to the kidneys by the blood.
Carbon monoxide a waste product found in cigarette smoke is more readily absorbed by the red blood cells than oxygen. This reduces the ability of the red blood cells in transporting oxygen around the body.