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)
As blood moves through the lungs, oxygen is exchanged for carbon dioxide. Oxygen diffuses from the air in the lungs into the blood, increasing the oxygen level in the blood. Conversely, carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood into the air in the lungs, decreasing the carbon dioxide level in the blood.
The questions leads towards which physiological important gases the blood contains.When the blood moves TO the lungs it has both CO2 (carbondioxide) and O2 (oxygen). However the level of oxygen is lower, and the level of CO2 is higher than with blood coming from the lungs.
the oxygen releases carbon dioxide
The lungs are the primary organs that fill blood with oxygen. Oxygen from the air is inhaled into the lungs, where it moves into the bloodstream through tiny blood vessels called capillaries surrounding the lungs' air sacs.
In the lungs. The blood is pumped from the right side of the heart to the lungs. Air moves into the trachea, the bronchi and finally to the alveoli. From the alveoli oxygen diffuses into the microcapilaries (small blood vessels) of the lungs.
The lungs are responsible for taking in oxygen from the air we breathe and transferring it into the bloodstream. This occurs through the process of gas exchange in the lungs where oxygen moves into the blood vessels in exchange for carbon dioxide.
The left atrium receives blood from the lungs. This blood moves into the left ventricle to be sent out to the body.
through respiratory membrane via diffusion
Oxygen is the substance that moves from the bloodstream to the air via the lungs during respiration. This process occurs in the alveoli of the lungs where oxygen is exchanged for carbon dioxide.
Oxygen moves from the lungs into the bloodstream through a process called diffusion. This occurs at the alveoli, which are small air sacs in the lungs where oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged with the blood. Oxygen diffuses from an area of high concentration in the alveoli to an area of lower concentration in the blood, facilitated by the difference in partial pressures.
Oxygen is able to pass into your blood through diffusion. In the lungs, oxygen moves from the alveoli in the lungs into the surrounding capillaries where it binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells for transport throughout the body.
Oxygen moves from the lungs to the blood through a process called diffusion. This occurs at the alveoli in the lungs, where oxygen in the air sacs diffuses across the alveolar membrane into the capillaries surrounding the alveoli. From there, the oxygen binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells for transport to the body's tissues.