It is the intravascular fluid part of extracellular fluid (all body fluid outside of cells)
i would think its because has a liquid part as well as a solid part to it. Blood is composed of red blood cells & white blood cells etc... Tissues on a simple scale are defined as a compilation of cells so....there you go, a fluid tissue.
Blood is quite heterogeneous; there is the actual liquid part (plasma) and then various solid or semi-solid parts suspended it in (the blood cells, for example).
No, interstitial fluid is not part of a cell. It is the fluid found in the spaces between cells in tissues. It provides a medium for the exchange of nutrients, wastes, and other substances between blood vessels and cells.
No, tissue fluid is not part of the blood.
The fluid that leaves blood cells is plasma, which is a yellowish component of blood that contains water, electrolytes, hormones, and proteins. The small particles it contains are platelets, which help in blood clotting, and white blood cells, which are part of the immune system and help fight infections.
The fluid part of the circulatory system is called blood. It consists of plasma, which is the liquid component that carries blood cells, nutrients, hormones, and waste products throughout the body.
Blood is composed of plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. Plasma is the liquid component in which the other blood cells are suspended. Red blood cells are responsible for carrying oxygen throughout the body. White blood cells are part of the immune system and help fight infection. Platelets are essential for blood clotting to stop bleeding.
Blood is made up of blood cells. It's kind of self explanatory.
Red blood cells are cells that carry oxygen and contain a special substance called hemoglobin. In the lungs, oxygen combines with hemoglobin to give oxy-hemoglobin which is bright red in color. Red blood cells wear out after a couple of months. The marrow manufactures new red cells to replace worn out ones. There are several million red blood cells in a single drop of blood.
Blood cells, plasma, and platelets all carry blood, platelets help blood clot and move red & white blood cells around, Plasma is the liquid part of the blood that holds blood cells and gets moved around by platelets, and blood cells move around in your blood fighting infections & protecting your wounds by forming scabs.
The solid portion of the blood is mainly made up of red blood cells. There are white blood cells and platelets too.