no. you body regulates what it does and doesnt need. when signals are sent through saying blood cells are dying or are damaged your body eliminates them and generates new daughter cells. but, your body can only produce so much per day that is why you can only donate blood every 3 days or else you would not be able to function or even die because of the blood loss from donating and not giving your body enough time to resupply the blood.
Red is not a problem, this simply means you can transport more oxygen around the body. A lot of doping in athletes does just this. You can also increase your red blood count by staying at high altitude.
White however is symptoms of infections. High count of white blood cells is normally used by medical personnel to check for infections.
heamoglobin is found in red blood cells so the many numbers of red blood cells the same number of haemoglobin will be there.:)
this means your body is trying to fight off a serious illness...a severe auto imune disorder
Myeloproliferative disease causes the bone marrow to overproduce red blood cells.
That would make you normal.
Normal people have roughly 1000 times more red cells than white cells.
Yes, to many red or white blood cells can destroy your body.
There are so many causes that it would take too long to list. So I have included a link down below.
To add more blood to your body cells.
red blood cells
Red blood cells contain hemoglobin, but white blood cells do not
White blood cells have. But erithrocytes lack many
The old red blood cells get replaced by the newly formed red blood cells.
To add more blood to your body cells.
6,200,000,000,000 or 6.2 trillion red blood cells per liter of blood
A red blood cells does not have any chromosomes. Red blood cells do not have a nucleus so it is impossible for them to have chromosomes.
red blood cells. but there are also many white blood cells. not as many though.
hemophagia
One microliter of blood contains approximately 5 million red blood cells.
8 million red blood cells
Billions! :)
Red blood cells contain hemoglobin. These cells are also known as erythrocytes.
There are 500 white blood cells to every 1000 red blood cells (or you could say there is double the amount of red blood cells). The answer would be 200 red blood cells for every 100 white blood cells.
Red blood cells because that is what carries oxygen throughout the body
The basic components include red/white blood cells, platelets, and plasma.