haemoglobin
practically no difference. In both the hemoglobin has the same job, bonding with oxygen.
Reduced hemoglobin does not have the oxygen molecules that oxyhemoglobin has. :)
Not usually.
The difference in electrophoretic pattern between normal hemoglobin A and hemoglobin S is due to a single amino acid substitution. In hemoglobin S, a glutamic acid is replaced by a valine at position 6 of the beta-globin chain. This change causes hemoglobin S to have a different charge, leading to its characteristic migration pattern on electrophoresis.
loss of only one amino acid from the normal hemoglobin molecule
Menstruation and poor diet.
There is no correlation between hemoglobin and lung cancer. A high or low hemoglobin can mean any number of conditions; people with lung cancer can have any level of hemoglobin depending on situation and other conditions.
no there is no gender difference however your haemolglobin levels vary.
No, hemoglobin is not attracted to magnets. Hemoglobin is a protein found in red blood cells that carries oxygen, and it does not contain any magnetic properties.
Being anemic would make no difference to either pregnancy tests or pregnancy symptoms.
Only vertebrates and some invertebrates have hemoglobin. Plants don't need hemoglobin (and therefore don't have any) to take up oxygen because they can do so via their stomatal openings in their leaves.
yes. the normal range of haemoglobin for : adult males: 14-18 gm/dl adult females: 12-16 gm/dl