A low amount of white blood cells will cause an increase in illness and disease. This is because white blood cells are used to fight disease and illnesses. Everyday, thousands of bacteria and viruses enter the body and the white blood cells fight the them. With a lower count of white blood cells, you are more susceptible to disease as your body won't be able to fight the disease as efficiently.
In humans, gametes (Ove and Sperm cells) have the least number of chromosomes
no at least not under normal conditions.
BASOPHILS
The animal with the least amount of cells is a worm
Red blood cells are the most abundant White blood cells are the second most Platelets are the least abundant
The most common type of white blood cells are called Basophils
A and B are antigens that are on the surface of red blood cells. People have one, both, or none. If you don't naturally produce the antigen, your body's white blood cells will attack and destroy red blood cells that carry them. So if a person with type A blood is injected with type B blood, the body of that person will attack the type-B blood cells. O- is called the universal donor, because it lacks all antigens. So no one's body will recognize it as foreign. Because of this, hospitals often administer O- blood to patients with a critical need, because there isn't enough time to determine blood type of the patient.
The least common blood cells are basophil granulocytes. These are referred to as basophils. Basophils make up 0.01 percent to 0.3 percent of white blood cells.
basophils (0%-1%)
Hemoglobin is an indicator of the number of red blood cells being produced by the bone marrow. Multiple myeloma invades the bone marrow and cripples its ability to produce red blood cells. You need red blood cells to deliver oxygen to every part of the body. Without oxygen we cannot survive. As multiple myeloma progresses the bone marrow is less and less able to produce red blood cells. This is called anemia. A hemoglobin of 5.3 is alarmingly low. This can possibly indicate that the myeloma is progressing. Hemoglobin should at the very least be above 10. anything less than that requires replacement with a blood transfusion.
Red blood cells are by far the most abundant cells in the blood. There are an average of 2,830,000 RBCs per cubic millimeter (microliter). RBCs account for approximately 40 to 45 percent of the blood. This percentage of blood made up of RBCs is a frequently measured number and is called the hematocrit. The ratio of cells in normal blood is 600 RBCs for each white blood cell and 40 platelets.
To observe blood cells under a microscope, a magnification level of at least 400x is typically required.