After blood releases oxygen to the cells of the body the blood becomes deoxygenized. It then travels back to the heart to get more oxygen.
When blood enters the pulmonary arteries, it is sent into the lungs' capillaries. Capillaries are only about one cell thick, so oxygen in the aveoli is able to diffuse into the bloodstream. Red blood cells contain hemoglobin, which has a high affinity for oxygen. Oxygen binds to the red blood cells and is delivered to cells in need of oxygen. In addition, the blood enters the lungs in the alveoli area and it releases CO2. After it releases the CO2, the erythrocytes in the blood bond with oxygens. The blood is then carried back to the heart.
Red blood cells because they are your main source of blood. White blood cells help protect your body from harmful diseases and the flu. Your white blood cells even fight an infection in your body when you have a fever!
The Respiratory System.
Hemoglobin is what transports the oxygen in the red blood cells.
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
deoxygenated
The hemoglobin in red blood cells releases oxygen to other cells throughout the body.
When the blood is pumped through the body, it delivers essential oxygen for cells to function. When the blood becomes oxygen-poor, it goes past the lungs, in which the gas exchange, where the oxygen poor blood releases carbon dioxide, which is a bi product of the system (and is to be breathed out), and retrieves the air from the lungs, to begin the process again.
If the oxygen-rich blood and the oxygen poor blood mix the amount of oxygen becomes diluted. The cells and tissues need more oxygen than they will get.
Red blood cells absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide at lungs which was absorbed from other cells in the body during blood circulation, then it releases oxygen to those body cells in order to respire and release energy .
If the oxygen-rich blood and the oxygen poor blood mix the amount of oxygen becomes diluted. The cells and tissues need more oxygen than they will get.
If the oxygen-rich blood and the oxygen poor blood mix the amount of oxygen becomes diluted. The cells and tissues need more oxygen than they will get.
When blood enters the pulmonary arteries, it is sent into the lungs' capillaries. Capillaries are only about one cell thick, so oxygen in the aveoli is able to diffuse into the bloodstream. Red blood cells contain hemoglobin, which has a high affinity for oxygen. Oxygen binds to the red blood cells and is delivered to cells in need of oxygen. In addition, the blood enters the lungs in the alveoli area and it releases CO2. After it releases the CO2, the erythrocytes in the blood bond with oxygens. The blood is then carried back to the heart.
blood flows through your body through the pumping of your heart. however on your red blood cells are hemoglobin which holds oxygen.when your blood cells go through your cells...the hemoglobin picks up the oxygen poor blood and deposits it at your lungs (to be realeased thru exhaling) and get oxygen rich blood (from inhaling)
The hemoglobin in red blood cells carries oxygen from the lungs to the tissues in the rest of the body, where it releases the oxygen to the tissues and collects the resultant carbon dioxide bringing it back to the lungs to be exhaled.
it changes oxygen to Carbon dioxide in the cells and the carbon becomes carboxy heamoglobin
Red blood cells because they are your main source of blood. White blood cells help protect your body from harmful diseases and the flu. Your white blood cells even fight an infection in your body when you have a fever!