Biology, asked by himanshi11panwar, 6 months ago

all organisms need in oxygen and gave out carbon dioxide should there be lesser Oxygen and excess of carbon dioxide and our environment ?​

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Answered by Anonymous
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HOME / ... / EXCHANGING OXYGEN AND CARBON DIOXIDE

Exchanging Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide

By Rebecca Dezube, MD, MHS, Johns Hopkins University

Last full review/revision Jun 2019| Content last modified Jun 2019

CLICK HERE FOR THE PROFESSIONAL VERSION

The primary function of the respiratory system is to take in oxygen and eliminate carbon dioxide. Inhaled oxygen enters the lungs and reaches the alveoli. The layers of cells lining the alveoli and the surrounding capillaries are each only one cell thick and are in very close contact with each other. This barrier between air and blood averages about 1 micron (1/10,000 of a centimeter, or 0.000039 inch) in thickness. Oxygen passes quickly through this air-blood barrier into the blood in the capillaries. Similarly, carbon dioxide passes from the blood into the alveoli and is then exhaled.

Oxygenated blood travels from the lungs through the pulmonary veins and into the left side of the heart, which pumps the blood to the rest of the body (see Function of the Heart). Oxygen-deficient, carbon dioxide-rich blood returns to the right side of the heart through two large veins, the superior vena cava and the inferior vena cava. Then the blood is pumped through the pulmonary artery to the lungs, where it picks up oxygen and releases carbon dioxide.

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