Respiration.
from the blood stream, both carbohydrates and oxygen.
Deoxygenated blood is not collected anywhere. Blood is a constantly moving stream - it never stops, as the question implies. The oxygen poor blood goes to the lungs, where it turns oxygenated as it takes up oxygen.
No. Quite the opposite: carbon monoxide binds to hemoglobin, which prevents the blood from carrying oxygen. This condition can be fatal.
through cells in the villi of the small intestine
Oxygen is transported through the circulatory system by binding to hemoglobin in red blood cells. Hemoglobin carries the oxygen from the lungs to the tissues in the body where it is needed for cellular respiration. The oxygen is released from hemoglobin and diffuses into the surrounding tissues to support their metabolic functions.
Oxygen is absorbed in the blood stream primarily in the lungs through the process of diffusion. When we breathe in, oxygen from the air enters the lungs and diffuses across the alveoli into the capillaries, where it binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells and is transported throughout the body.
On a very basic level, it is absorbed through capillaries in the lungs into red blood cells in the the blood stream.
from the aveolus
the liver
Oxygen enters the blood stream through the air sacs in you lungs.
Yes, the blood from the lungs is rich in oxygen. Since you breathe in oxygen and nutrients through your nose/mouth to the lungs, the oxygen and nutrients are absorbed in the lungs and go through the blood stream into the heart
yep
so that the nutrients are absorbed to the blood stream
In air breathing animals, oxygen enters the blood stream through the alveoli, tiny sacs in the lungs. In water breathing animals oxygen enters the blood stream through the gills.
It gets absorbed into the blood stream via Lumen and a Glucose/Na+ symporter, Na+/K+ atpase and glucose 2 uniporter, but essentially is absorbed into the blood stream.
dosent
Oxygen is brought into the blood stream by inhalation. Carbon dioxide moves out of the cells, into the blood, and taken to the lungs to be exhaled. Oxygen in, carbon dioxide out.