No, as the red blood cells carry oxygen [O2] to the tissues of the body, and return carbon dioxide [CO2] to the lungs for removal from the body when exhaling. Without the red blood cells, the cells of the body will die.
No, it is not possible to live without a spleen as it plays a critical role in the immune system by filtering blood and removing old or damaged red blood cells. Additionally, the spleen helps fight infections and stores blood for emergencies.
membranes "wear out" and the cells become damaged
Red blood cells because that is what carries oxygen throughout the body
No- bone marrow is the source of all your red blood cells (which carry oxygen), platelets (which help clot your blood) and white blood cells (which fight infections). Although you can replace your red cells and platelets with blood transfusions, you cannot replace your immune system, so you would contract infection after infection, and eventually that would lead to death. A condition that causes this would be aplastic anaemia.
The kind of marrow that produces red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets is red marrow which is found in the bones.
Not long without any at all! Because red blood cells make up alot of the blood and then there would be nothing to pump to the heart or anythng to carry oxygen and stuff.
I think red blood cells live about 21 days.
White blood cells and platelets are the blood cells without hemoglobin. It is found in red blood cells.
It is still blood, just without platelets. It still contains the red blood cells and plasma, which are valuable for use even without the clotting factors. Plasma without clotting factors is serum.
Red Blood cells carry oxygen to your cells while white blood cells only fight off bacteria. Theres more red blood cells becase we need more of them to live.
Red blood cells carry oxygen from the lungs to all the organs so they can live.
Red blood cells live about 120 days. When they get old their membrane started to show wear and they get removed from the blood circulation.
red blood cells and white blood cells the red blood cells keep us a live and the white blood cells fight off disease and infection. To complete the answer, the red cells carry oxygen from the lungs to the tissue, etc., cells that need it.
All cells are born with a nucleus, but not the red blood cell. Without the large structure in the cell, it can carry more oxygen. But without a nucleus, it cannot reproduce and will die eventually. A red blood cell's life span is about 3-4 months. After that, it will be sent to the liver to be destroyed.When red blood cells are destroyed they release heme, a prosthetic group, that consists of iron. Iron is used to reproduce red blood cells in bone marrow. Red blood cells usually are reproduced in bone marrow.
There are no known cells that can live without DNA. DNA contains the genetic information necessary for cellular function, including the production of proteins and the regulation of cell processes. Without DNA, cells would not be able to replicate, maintain their structure, or carry out the essential functions required for survival.
No they don't. Red blood cells carry oxygen to all cells in our body. Red blood cells are made in our bone marrow, live for 120 days and are destroyed in our spleens. At any one time we have red blood cells of all ages floating in our blood. Red blood cells account for 45% of the volume of our blood.
No, it is not possible to live without a spleen as it plays a critical role in the immune system by filtering blood and removing old or damaged red blood cells. Additionally, the spleen helps fight infections and stores blood for emergencies.