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  1. Artery (6875 bytes)
    15: ...s oxygen carrying capability, about 20 fold. Each hemoglobin molecule can bind up to four molecules of element...
    17: ...). Returning from the body to the right atrium, [[hemoglobin]] molecules have typically given up only 1 of the...
  2. Pulmonary alveolus (8193 bytes)
    16: ...lity of the gas the ability of the gas to bind to hemoglobin. [[Water vapor]] is also excreted through the lu...
    18: ...ations in the blood, due to its strong binding to hemoglobin, that equilibrium is not reached before the blood...
    20: ... contaminated with dust particles or micro-organisms.
  3. Liver (11441 bytes)
    1: ...e]], which is important for digestion. Medical terms related to the liver often start in ''hepato-'' o...
    53: * The liver performs several roles in [[carbohydrate]] [[metabolism]]:
    58: * The liver also performs several roles in [[lipid]] metabolism:
    62: * The liver breaks down [[hemoglobin]] ([[bile]] pigments are its metabolites), [[toxi...
    70: .... The bilirubin results from the breakup of the [[hemoglobin]] of dead [[red blood cell]]s; normally, the live...
  4. Lung (7057 bytes)
    2: ...nonrespiratory functions of the lungs. Medical terms related to the lung often start in '''''pulmo-'''...
    17: ...ffuses]] into the blood, where it is carried by [[hemoglobin]].
    28: ...from those of mammal. In addition to the lungs themselves, birds have posterior and anterior air sacs ...
  5. Bottlenose Dolphin (16802 bytes)
    66: ...ins. [[Orca]]s may also prey on them, but this seems rare.
    85: ...of marine mammals is forbidden in almost all circumstances. The international trade in dolphins is als...
    112: ... and distribution of the aduncus and truncatus forms of bottlenose dolphin Tursiops in the Indian and ...
    114: ...Offshore and Coastal Bottlenose Dolphins Based on Hemoglobin Profile and Morphometry.'' In The Bottlenose Dolp...
    116: #Ainsley Thomson. ''[http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?...
  6. Carbon (15360 bytes)
    2: ... has several [[Allotropes of carbon|allotropic forms]]:
    4: ...onal network of puckered six-membered rings of atoms.
    5: ... each atom is bonded trigonally to three other atoms, making a 2-dimensional network of flat six-membe...
    10: ...ty web of graphite-like clusters, in which the atoms are bonded trigonally in six- and seven-membered ...
    11: ...om is bonded trigonally in a curved sheet that forms a hollow cylinder.
  7. Iron (23778 bytes)
    144: ... the best known alloy of iron, and some of the forms that iron takes include:
    154: ...the [[Egypt]]ians, where around 4000 BC, small items, such as the tips of spears and ornaments, were b...
    163: ...t, near Xinjiang, in the 8th century BC. These items were made of wrought iron, created by the same pr...
    218: ... a wide range of functions within several life forms, such as [[enzymes]] [[methane monooxygenase]] (o...
    235: ... quantity, the body's own [[antioxidant]] mechanisms can control this process. In excess, uncontrollab...
  8. Oxygen (9039 bytes)
    40: .../sub>. O<sub>2</sub> itself has two energetic forms: the low-energy, predominant single-bonded [[dira...
    63: ...ich the oxygen atom is part of a ring of three atoms.
    71: ...ilirubin which is normally a breakdown product of hemoglobin. Highly concentrated sources of oxygen promote ra...
  9. Inorganic chemistry (2930 bytes)
    1: ...h are based upon chains or rings of [[carbon]] atoms, which are termed organic compounds and are studi...
    15: ...istry is based upon [[physical chemistry]] and forms the basis for [[mineralogy]] and [[materials chem...
    17: ... B12]], whose active site is similar to that of [[hemoglobin|haemoglobin]], is a naturally-occurring, metaboli...
    19: ...ibed by infinite lattices of regularly-ordered atoms and which are studied by [[crystallography]] and ...
  10. Octopus (12952 bytes)
    17: Octopuses are characterized by their eight arms, usually with sucker cups on them. Unlike most ot...
    19: Three defensive mechanisms are typical of octopuses: [[ink sac]]s, [[camoufl...
    25: ...oxygen]]. Less efficient than the [[iron]]-rich [[hemoglobin]] of vertebrates, the hemocyanin is dissolved in ...
    31: ... have a remarkable amount of autonomy. Octopus arms show a wide variety of complex [[reflex]] actions...
    33: ...g them. Octopuses often break out of their aquariums (and sometimes into others) in search of food. Th...
  11. Protein (17280 bytes)
    30: ===Mechanisms of protein regulation===
    33: ...rotein's [[shape]] or [[concentration]]. Some forms of regulation include:
    43: ...es. From left to right are: Immunoglobulin (IgG), Hemoglobin, Insulin (a hormone), Adenylate Kinase (an enzyme...
    65: ...and [[methionine]]) that humans cannot produce themselves. While all natural foods contain all of thes...
    80: Protein deficiency can lead to symptoms such as fatigue, [[insulin]] resistance, [[hair]]...
  12. Blood (11213 bytes)
    4: ...[[white blood cell]]s, [[platelet]]s). Medical terms related to blood often begin in ''hemo-'' or ''he...
    6: ... be transported between tissues and organs. Problems with blood composition or circulation can lead to...
    9: ...roteins to increase the oxygen carrying capacity. Hemoglobin is the most common respiratory protein found in n...
    20: ...lls]] strictly speaking. They contain the blood's hemoglobin and distribute oxygen. The red blood cells (toget...
    43: The [[hemoglobin]] molecule is the primary transporter of oxygen. ...

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