i would think its because has a liquid part as well as a solid part to it. Blood is composed of red blood cells & white blood cells etc... Tissues on a simple scale are defined as a compilation of cells so....there you go, a fluid tissue.
This is because the protein cannot travel through the cell walls of the capillaries as they are too large for the gaps.
Blood contains erythrocytes, thrombocytes and leukocytes whereas tissue fluid does not.
At the proximal end of capillary, you get the fluid out in the tissue fluid due to blood pressure. At the distal end of the capillary, you get back the tissue fluid due to oncotic pressure of the blood proteins.
Blood is a connective tissue that has a liquid matrix.
Blood and lymph fluid (the proper term is fluidconnective tissue)
Location also LYMPH . - Lymph means clear water and it is derived from the fluid and protein that has been squeezed out of the blood (i.e. blood plasma). - It is a pale fluid that bathes the tissues of an organism, maintaining fluid balance, and removes bacteria from tissues; it enters the blood system by way of lymphatic channels and ducts. - Prominent among the constituents of lymph are lymphocytes and macrophages, the primary cells of the immune system with which the body defends itself from invasion by foreign microorganisms. - It contains fluid from the intestines called chyle, which contains proteins and fats. INTERSTITIAL FLUID - Interstitial fluid (or tissue fluid, or intercellular fluid) is a solution which bathes and surrounds the cells of multicellular animals. - To prevent a build-up of tissue fluid surrounding the cells in the tissue, the lymphatic system plays a part in the transport of tissue fluid. - Tissue fluid can pass into the surrounding lymph vessels (now called Lymph), and eventually ends up rejoining the blood.
when lymph fluid is contained inside lymph vessels or lymph node(lymphatic system) it is called lymph whereas when it is squeezed out of cells b/w the cell membranes it is called tissue fluid
At the proximal end of capillary, you get the fluid out in the tissue fluid due to blood pressure. At the distal end of the capillary, you get back the tissue fluid due to oncotic pressure of the blood proteins.
describe the differences between intravenous fluid and blood
concentration of proteins.
No, tissue fluid is not part of the blood.
Blood is a connective tissue that has a liquid matrix.
Perfuse means to force fluid through (could be through tissue or organ) by way of blood vessels. Profuse means plentiful or abundant.
Blood and tissue fluid normally have a pH of 7.35 to 7.45
Blood and lymph fluid (the proper term is fluidconnective tissue)
blood is considered s type of connective tissue, and it lack fibers
Although the human body has numerous "fluids" in it, blood is the only thing that is considered a "fluid tissue." This means that it is a tissue in the body just like muscle tissue, however it is fluid unlike muscle tissue. The answer is yes.
blood
Blood flows in capillaries, but there is blood leaks out from the capillaries, known as tissue fluid or interstitial fluid.