lower
It would be lower. Aplastic anemia is the result of the failure of the bone marrow to produce adequate blood cells.
No, alcohol consumption does not lead to an increase in red blood cell count. In fact, excessive alcohol consumption can actually decrease red blood cell count and lead to anemia.
An infection may decrease the red blood cell count. For example, ebola will do so.
Red blood cell count (RBC-count) is the number of erythrocytes in one liter of blood.Packed cell volume (PCV) is the percentage of erythrocytes in one liter of blood. Thus, PCV is a measure of the totalvolume of red blood cells in a sample, while RBC-count is the number of red blood cells in a sample, MCV- mean corpuscular volume is the mean volume of erythrocytes in a sample, thus:PCV = RBC-count x MCV
yes you have to it keep red blood cell to keep moistly
Red blood cell count
Barbiturates can lower red blood cell count by suppressing the bone marrow's ability to produce red blood cells. This can lead to a condition called aplastic anemia, where the body does not produce enough red blood cells. It is important to monitor blood cell counts regularly in patients taking barbiturates.
blood cell count, hemoglobin, and hematocrit
No, the opiate group is usually not associated with increasing either red or white blood cell counts.
Anaemia
White blood cell count goes down. Red stays the same.