Carbon Dioxide
Red Blood Cells
red blood cells
Red blood cells, corpuscles, transport oxygenated blood from the lungs to the body, and carbon dioxide from the body to the lungs.
Oxygen is inhaled into the lungs and diffuses into red blood cells in the capillaries, where it binds to hemoglobin. Carbon dioxide is released from red blood cells into the lungs and exhaled out of the body. This exchange of gases occurs through the process of respiration.
exhaled
The red blood cells pick up oxygen from the air that is inhaled into the lungs. When the red cells pick up the oxygen from the air, they expel carbon dioxide into the lungs to be exhaled.
1. To bring oxygen to cells around the body 2. To bring carbon dioxide from cells to our lungs to be exhaled
The main function of red blood cells in the human body is to transport oxygen from the lungs to all the cells in the body and to carry carbon dioxide back to the lungs to be exhaled.
carbon dioxide is expelled from cells into the blood stream, carried to the lungs, and exhaled.
The function of red blood cells in the human body is to transport oxygen from the lungs to all the cells in the body and to carry carbon dioxide back to the lungs to be exhaled.
Multipotent hematopoietic stem cells------> Myeloid stem cells------>Reticulocytes----->RBCs
oxygen is carried by the red blood cells, but carbon dioxide is separated from the air you breathe in the lungs, then exhaled.