The average human body has about 7,000 white blood cells per microliter of blood. The average adult human has about 5.25 liters of blood, or 5,250,000 microliters. Multiplying these two numbers gives a total of almost 37 billion white blood cells. Note that this is simply an average.
There are 500 white blood cells to every 1000 red blood cells (or you could say there is double the amount of red blood cells). The answer would be 200 red blood cells for every 100 white blood cells.
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No, white blood cells are not solid. White blood cells are made up of vitamins, gases, nucleic acids and many other components. White blood cells comprise a body's immune system.
Leukemia, the prefix "leuke" means white blood,Leukemia is when you haev to many white blood cells.
There are about a thousand times as many red blood cells as white cells. Consider that the red blood cells (or erythrocytes) in a mm3 (or microliter) of blood number about five million in an average man (a few less in a woman). The white blood cells (or leukocytes) number only 5-6 thousand per mm3 so the ratio is about a thousand fold.
there are about 6000-9000 WHITE BLOOD CELLS in your body
red blood cells. but there are also many white blood cells. not as many though.
There are billions of white blood cells that are in the circulatory system. A normal white blood count is between 4,500 to 10,000 white blood cells per microliter.
No, white blood cells are not solid. White blood cells are made up of vitamins, gases, nucleic acids and many other components. White blood cells comprise a body's immune system.
Billions! :)
The basic components include red/white blood cells, platelets, and plasma.
because the red blood cells make up almost 45% of the blood composition while the white blood cells are only 1% in comparison. so the red blood cells appear more often than the white blood cells.