If the cut off from tube dialysis will be larger than the insulin shape, insulin cant pass through it
can protein (albumin) diffuse out of a dialysis tube and why
The tubing is permeable; itallows water to pass through the tube wall.
The reason why red blood cells don't pass through the dialysis tube is because red blood cells are too large to fit through the pores in the membranes but urea and salt flow through membranes into the sterile solution and are removed.
fine glucose molecules can pass through the wall of the visking tube.
A lavender or purple-colored tube is typically used for insulin testing.
Glucose diffuses through dialysis tubing into the distilled water as, glucose molecules are small, it could fit through the pores of the dialysis tube. It is also because glucose is hydrophillic, (polar compound), which will dissolve in water as it is a polar compound as well.
Dialysis membranes are typically not permeable to sucrose. Removing sugar from the blood can be dangerous as it can lead to hypoglycemia. Sugar molecules are too large to pass through dialysis membranes.
The tube where the eggs pass after the ostium is called the fallopian tube. It is where fertilization typically occurs, as the egg is transported from the ovary to the uterus through the fallopian tube.
peritoneal dialysis work on the same principle except abdomen has a peritoneal cavity, lined by a thin epithelium called as peritoneum. peritoneal cavity is filled with dialysis fluid that enters the body through a catheter. excess water and waste pass through the peritoneum into the dialysis fluid. this process is repeated several times in a day.
falopian tube ;)
yes