When blood reaches the tissues, cells, and organs via the capillaries, materials diffuse across the capillary wall so that the cells, tissues, and organs receive nutrients and oxygen, and eliminate wastes.
When oxygen reaches the lungs, it diffuses through the walls of the tiny air sacs (alveoli) into the surrounding blood vessels. It binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells, which then carry the oxygen-rich blood to the body's tissues and organs. This process allows oxygen to be delivered to cells for energy production.
Hemoglobin is the substance in the blood responsible for carrying oxygen to the tissues. It is a protein found in red blood cells that binds to oxygen in the lungs and releases it to the body's tissues and organs.
As blood passes through lungs, there is exchange of oxygen and carbon bi oxide, from high concentration to low concentration and oxygen enters the blood from air to blood to make it oxygen rich.
Glycerol is released into the bloodstream from adipose tissues and can be used by various tissues for energy production through a process called glycolysis. It can also be converted into glucose in the liver through gluconeogenesis to maintain blood glucose levels.
At tissue cells, the oxygen dissociation reaction involves the release of oxygen from hemoglobin in red blood cells. When blood reaches the tissues, the lower partial pressure of oxygen and higher levels of carbon dioxide and acidity promote the release of oxygen from hemoglobin, a process known as the Bohr effect. This allows oxygen to diffuse from the blood into the surrounding tissues, where it is utilized for cellular respiration.
The oxyhaemoglobin will break down and oxygen will release. :)
When oxygen reaches the alveoli in the lungs, it diffuses from the air in the alveoli into the surrounding capillaries. The oxygen then binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells, which transports it to the body's tissues for use in cellular respiration.
the kidneys clean it by removing the waste from the blood
Once oxygenated blood reaches the capillaries, the velocity of the blood is very slow - which favours the exchange of oxygen. Oxygen therefore diffuses across the walls of the capillaries into the tissues that need it.
Blood flows through veins after delivering oxygen to the body.
when the blood reaches to the tissues then the cells embedded inside it absorbs the oxygen from the haemoglobin present inside the blood and blood absorbs all the waste material from the tissues like CO2,etc.then the blood passes the waste materials to the lungs AND AFTERWARDS it comes out through the process of respiration.
exchage of materials between blood and tissues occur in cappilaries.
Oxygen is bound to the haemoglobin in the blood in the lung tissues, then this oxygenated blood is returned to the heart for distribution via the arteries.
Death.
you breathe out xx
The flow of blood to tissues beyond the clot may be cut off
When oxygen reaches the lungs, it diffuses through the walls of the tiny air sacs (alveoli) into the surrounding blood vessels. It binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells, which then carry the oxygen-rich blood to the body's tissues and organs. This process allows oxygen to be delivered to cells for energy production.