Basically, oxygen is used in aerobic respiration, which combines it with glucose to form adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which cells use for energy. It also produces the waste product carbon dioxide, which is removed from the body when you breathe out.
When not enough oxygen is available to produce the amount of ATP, the body can also use anaerobic respiration, which uses glucose to produce ATP. However, it is less efficient than aerobic respiration, and produces lactic acid as a waste product.
Your muscles hurt when you exercise too much largely because when you work them too hard, they can't get enough oxygen, and they have to use anaerobic respiration as well as aerobic respiration. This causes lactic acid to build up inside them, which hurts.
Wikipedia's page on cellular respiration has more details if you need them.
Lactic acid moves the pyruvate plus continuing glycolysis.
C. Energy is released during cellular respiration, in the form of chemical energy.
Lactic Acid or Alcohol
Yes. Cell respiration and lactic acid fermentation.
aerobic respiration and possibly lactic acid fermentation
Aerobis respiration produces 36 ATP, while glycolysis and anaerobic only produce 2.
ATP, lactic acid fermentation, and cellular respiration
C. Energy is released during cellular respiration, in the form of chemical energy.
No; it is in cellular respiration.
Your muscle cells do when you preform lactic acid fermentation.
Lactic Acid or Alcohol
Glycolysis and Fermentation (Lactic Acid and Alcoholic).
ATP and lactic acid
Cellular Respiration produces the most ATP, out of Cellular respiration, Photosynthesis, lactic acid Fermentation, and alcohol fermentation.
Yes. Cell respiration and lactic acid fermentation.
aerobic respiration and possibly lactic acid fermentation
It is formed by ferementation, or aneroblic cellular respiration.
Lactic acid.