Yes, the liver removes iron from old red blood cells, and stores it for recycling. The spleen identifies these cells and sends the materials to the liver.
The spleen and the liver.
The liver is a work horse. It removes toxins from what we eat, stores sugar for energy, stores vitamin A and iron, destroys old red blood cells, and produces bile to digest fat.
The liver produces bile and removes many toxic poisons from the blood.
The liver removes wastes from the cells.
it removes poisons and damaged red blood cells.
The liver has over 1,500 different functions. It controls the concentrations of sugar in the blood. It also removes toxins from the bloodstream and stores them or neutralizes them.
It serves the body in three ways. •Removes excess glucose and stores it in the liver as glycogen. •Detoxifys blood. •Removes various poisonous substances present in blood.
The spleen removes old red blood cells. It breaks down the erythrocytes and recycles the hemoglobin, sending the heme portion to the liver for storage and recycling. The spleen also filters bacteria from the blood.
No, it removes it.
An organ that filters wastes from blood besides the kidneys is the liver. The liver removes glucose and stores it for future use. It also aids the kidneys in toxin removal.
The Excretory System removes wastes. This system includes the skin, the lungs, the liver, the kidneys, and the large intestine. The skin removes sweat. The lungs remove carbon dioxide and water vapor. The liver removes the breakdown of red blood cells in the form of bile. The kidneys remove toxins from the blood. The large intestine removes feces.
The liver filters the blood for the body.