hypoxemia
Deoxygenated blood is low in oxygen and high in carbon dioxide.
the quality of our blood that rich with oxygen will become low
Arteries carry blood high in oxygen away from the heart to the rest of the body. The blood in arteries is oxygenated, while veins carry blood low in oxygen back to the heart.
The right atrium and right ventricle of the heart contain blood low in oxygen. This blood returns from the body and is then pumped to the lungs in order to pick up oxygen.
Low oxygen/de-oxygenated blood is carried by:all the veins (except the pulmonary vein)the pulmonary artery.
Blood low in oxygen enters the right atrium of the heart through the superior and inferior vena cava.
Same blood as everywhere else. The difference is the gases in the blood: it enters the lungs low on oxygen and high in CO2, it leaves high in oxygen and low in CO2.
Low blood oxygen has many causes, often respiratory disorders, and can cause tissue hypoxia as the blood is not supplying enough oxygen to the body. Hypoxemia is the medical term used to refer to this condition.
The heart pumps blood low in oxygen and high in carbon dioxide to the lungs, where blood releases carbon dioxide and picks up oxygen.
low blood pressure leads to an insufficient transport of oxygen through the body
Oxygen diffuses into the blood in the lungs and binds to the hemoglobin since the oxygen concentration is high and the carbon dioxide concentration is low. The blood is pumped to the body. The hemoglobin releases the oxygen to the tissues because here, the concentration of oxygen is low and that of carbon dioxide is high.
The right atrium of the heart receives low-oxygen blood from the body through the superior and inferior vena cavae.