One microliter of blood contains approximately 5 million red blood cells.
200,000
About 25,000,000
In a normal drop of blood you will find red blood cells, white blood cells: Neutrophils, lymphocytes, eosinophils, basophils and platelets (not cells, but parts of megakaryocytes - cells formed in the bone marrow). In a normal drop of blood you will find red blood cells, white blood cells: Neutrophils, lymphocytes, eosinophils, basophils and platelets (not cells, but parts of megakaryocytes - cells formed in the bone marrow).
about 250,000,000
it is made out of red blood cells
Depends on how big the drop of blood is that you are talking about? 1 microliter (ul = 1 millions of a liter) of normal blood has about 3 million red cells and an average size drop is about 50 ul so one avergae size drop of normal blood has about 150 million red blood cells....................u are a ritard it is 50 billion ur mums
Red blood cells drop off oxygen to tissues and cells in the body through the process of diffusion in capillaries. Oxygen molecules bind to hemoglobin in red blood cells in the lungs and are released when the red blood cells reach tissues with lower oxygen concentration.
Between the range of 3 to 5 million cells per drop of blood.
in a drop of blood there is plasma, red blood cells (erythrocytes), white blood cells (leukocytes), and platelets (thrombocytes). I found that the blood is made of 4 things....... Plasma (90%) and then the other 10% is Leukocytes, thrombocytes, and erythrocytes....... AKA- White blood cells, red blood cells, and platelets. sup peeps
Blood cells. The largest compartment of blood cells are the red blood cells (also called erythrocytes), but you would also see white blood cells (including lymphocytes and phagocytes) and some platelets.
200,000
When Brad placed a drop of blood in distilled water, the red blood cells experienced a process called osmosis. Since the distilled water is hypotonic compared to the intracellular fluid of the red blood cells, water entered the cells, causing them to swell. If enough water enters, the cells may eventually burst in a process known as hemolysis.