Here are some:
lymphocyte, leukocyte (=white blood cell), granulocyte, monocyte
a stem cell... and it is a general cell that can change into a specific cell a red blood cell... it carries oxigen to parts of the body a white blood cell... it attacks and destroys some infections a skin cell... it defends the body from attacks on the outside....
No, saliva is not a type of white blood cell. It is a liquid secretion of the salivary glands, and it is composed mostly of water, with some digestive enzymes to help start the process of digestion as you chew your food.
White Blood Cells protect against infections in various ways. Some leukocytes phagocytize bacterial cells in the body, and other produce protein (antibodies) that destroy or disable foreign particles.
Sickle cell anemia and some nerve and brain disorders are examples of inherited diseases. These inherited diseases pass from parent to child via chromosomal exchange.
A white blood cell has no nucleus and haemoglobin. They are part of the immune system of the body. They are differentiated into five distinct types based on their shape. Muscle cells are rod shaped and are packed with thin fibers called myofibrils. They are nucleated and have haemoglobin. Muscle cells can contract and expand.
a stem cell... and it is a general cell that can change into a specific cell a red blood cell... it carries oxigen to parts of the body a white blood cell... it attacks and destroys some infections a skin cell... it defends the body from attacks on the outside....
red blood cell white blood cell root hair cell skin cell nerve cell
Some white blood cells are phagocytes. The word means "cell that eats".
its the type of cell
Both are eukariyotic cells.Both have nucleus and other organells.
phagocytosis occurs in our body when some foreign particle enters inside it, our white blood cells engulf it, and then digest it. it is also how some microorganisms like ameoba get their food. example: white blood cell engulfing a large, liquid protein droplet.
Not to any appreciable degree. If your white blood count is high, you probably have an infection of some kind.
Yes. Some produce anti-bodies and anti-toxins to destroy foreign organsims, while other types engulf (eat) the organisms. The white blood cell's anti-body types tell your blood type.
Some examples of specialized cells in cnidarians include cnidocytes (stinging cells) used for defense and capturing prey, sensory cells for detecting movement and light, and muscle cells for movement and contraction. Additionally, some cnidarians have specialized cells that secrete mucus or digestive enzymes for feeding.
Typically, high white blood count indicates an infection. In the early stages of cancer, white blood count does not typically change. So, no, a high white blood count isn't really a sign of cancer in the early stages. You'd know you have cancer well before your blood cells do. It is, however a good idea to run additional tests to know why your cell count is high.
Antibodies. which you know is a white blood cell that fights things that are anti-body.
There is no particular type of white blood cell that indicates a patient has cancer. Physicians may do a blood test to see if a patient has a large number of white blood cells, consistent with some types of blood cancers, but having a particular white blood cell kind doesn't indicate cancer in anyone.