hat are tiny pieces of blood cells inside membranes called?
Those "membranes" are called periosteum. The periosteum is how bone gets part of its blood supply.
Basolateral membrane
the inside of the bone is called bone marrow. it is a soft, fatty, vascular tissue that fills most bone cavities and is the source of red blood cells and many white blood cells.
1. Into the cell of the alveolus 2.+3. Out of the alvealus into cell of the capillary wall 4. Out of the cell of the capillary wall and into blood plasma 5. Into the red blood cell. So 5.
Through SPM, or semi-permeable membranes. These membranes (which protects the cell) only allows certain things to enter the cell.
The membranes that do not contain gland cells are called basement membranes. These basement membranes line the interiors of blood vessels and the skin.
Lymph is mainly leakage from blood vessels, thus it is almost identical EXCEPT for the absence of Red Blood cells.
Those are called, "Platelets".
The choroid plexus.
Cell membranes are characterized by the presence of phospholipids.
Not quite. Different blood types result from different antigens present on the membranes of red blood cells.
Yes. All cell membranes do. It makes them flexible.
The device placed inside blood vessels to keep them open is called a stent.
yes
It's called a cava or blood orange
red blood cells :)
Those "membranes" are called periosteum. The periosteum is how bone gets part of its blood supply.