no at least not under normal conditions.
Red blood cells are not found in the skin, but instead in your blood.
no
It damages you skin and cells turn into canerous cells!
When you exercise, you increase blood circulation. This in turn encourages growth hormone production hence accelerating the repairing of cells. When skin cells are repaired, they look like they're glowing.
The sun's ultraviolet rays damage the outer layer of the skin. The water, depending on the heat, can be simply increasing blood flow through thermal expansion of the blood vessels, or can be damaging the skin itself. If the skin hurts, turn down the water temperature.
bloodcells, skin cells, white blood cells
no
Oxygen.
I only know two cells, they are, blood cells, skin cells.
your blood is blue but as the blood reaches the surface of your skin it is red. hope this helps. Ayraayra: Your skin will turn a bluish-purplish color.
This is a very vauge question. While most "germs" are smaller than skin cells (viruses and smaller bacteria) some bacteria can be larger than skin cells. Though most aren't larger than white blood cells, the body's defenders.
Blood type is determined by the presence or absence of specific antigens on red blood cells. These antigens are not only present on red blood cells but also on other body cells, including cheek cells and skin cells. By analyzing the presence of these antigens on these cells, blood type can be determined.