Blood marrow? If were talking bone marrow in general there are different type of cells: Hematopoetic stem cells and all derived progenitor and blood cells, osteoblasts, osteoclasts, stroma cells and marrow adipocytes. I believe it's the latter you're interested in since it's a adipocyte or a fat cell.
If you meant blood or marrow, then it would be bone marrow because the percentage of adipocytes are significantly higher in marrow than in blood. Blood practically doesn't contain cells from fat tissues, however metastasing lipoma cells has been detected/confirmed by FACS/Flow Cytometry. But the occurence of this is phenomenally rare.
CSR - Molecular Biomedicin - University of Copenhagen
Bone marrow is the spongy tissues where blood cells and platelets are produced. This type of marrow is found in the shafts of long bones.
At birth, all bone marrow is red. With age, more and more of it is converted to the yellow type. About half of adult bone marrow is red. Red marrow is found mainly in the flat bones. In cases of severe blood loss, the body can convert yellow marrow back to red marrow to increase blood cell production.
The Bone Marrow
The form of cancer that affects the tissues that produce blood is called leukemia. Leukemia is a type of cancer that originates in the bone marrow, where blood cells are produced. It affects the white blood cells primarily, but it can also impact other types of blood cells, including red blood cells and platelets. Leukemia results in the abnormal proliferation of immature blood cells, leading to overcrowding in the bone marrow and impairing the production of normal blood cells.
Veins are the type of blood vessel that drains blood from tissues and returns it to the heart.
The type of marrow that is made up primarily of fat cells is the yellow bone marrow. The red bone marrow is made up of myeloids.
The bone marrow produces red blood cells, as well as b-lymphocytes (a type of white blood cell).
No, but a bone marrow transplant would change your blood type.
Bone marrow type and blood type are not the same. You should get your bone marrow checked to see if it matches the patient's type. However, if you were to give your B+ type blood to the patient, then it would be compatible.
No. Unless it was a magic towel that contained radiation to erradicate your bone marrow and transplant your sibling's bone marrow into your hollowed bones.... ;)
Thick blood
Both red and white blood cells