Yes
The normal concentration of sodium in the blood plasma is 136-145 mM
It is called plasmaThe name for the liquid part of blood is "plasma", and all other blood components are dissolved in or carried by the plasma.plasma plasma
Red blood cells? Absolutely. (if the antibody screen and crossmatch are both negative) Whole blood? No, there may be Anti-D in the O neg plasma.
Salt water contains NaCl, sodium chloride, aka "salt". This compound helps in the blood coagulation series, assisting in the process which triggers the enzymes necessary to cause platelets in the blood break down and begin the clotting sequence in the blood plasma.
blood plasma
Chloride Cl-
The single most abundant protein in normal plasma is albumin.
bicarbonate
Red blood cells. That's why blood is red.
The normal concentration of sodium in the blood plasma is 136-145 mM
protein buffer
Sodium chloride is dissolved in the plasma of the blood, along with other elements and compounds. Many proteins and salts are found in the liquid matrix called the plasma as well.
The types of patients who might need blood plasma are those who need a blood transfusion. Plasma is given as a component of blood. Only AB positive plasma can be used on people with any other blood type.
Isotonic means that the fluid has the same osmolarity as blood plasma - in the case of 0.9% sodium chloride, it means that this fluid has the same concentration of salt as blood plasma has.
A Rh negative patient cannot receive Rh positive blood as it will cause a antibody reaction to the donor plasma, but a Rh positive patient can receive Rh negative blood as the donor blood lacks the Rh antibody component. PS the Rh factor is present on Red blood cells and not in Plasma
hypertension
The two main ions found outside a human cell's membrane are Sodium (Na+) and Chloride (Cl-). Therefore the answer is sodium because it is a cation (positively charged).