Anaemia, kidney dysfunction, bleeding-excessive, vitamine B12 deficiency
Anemic hypoxia reflects poor oxygen delivery due to too few red blood cells (RBCs) or from RBCs that contain abnormal or too little hemoglobin. This leads to reduced oxygen-carrying capacity in the blood, resulting in inadequate oxygen reaching the body's tissues and cells.
Erythropoiesis (production of red blood cells) will occur when there are not enough red blood cells (RBCs) in circulation. Therefore the stimulation for erythropoiesis to occur is too few RBCs in the blood, which can be termed 'anaemia'.
To protect them from the few Adults who will exploit the inhered deficiencies of youth.
Anemia is the medical term meaning the blood has a reduced ability to carry oxygen due to inadequate hemoglobin or red blood cells. Anemia has many different causes, but iron deficiency is a common one.
That would depend upon which blood cells and how much would "too few" be. With a gross reduction in red blood cells (RBCs) that are responsible for carrying oxygen via iron on the heme molecule, one can be diagnosed as having anemia. With a gross reduction in white blood cells (WBCs), that help fight infection, one can be diagnosed as having a leukemia. There are a myriad contributing factors in both of these diagnoses, and having low levels does not automatically point to a startling condition, but may be part of painting a bigger picture of compromise.
Not very much time and it is a very complex process. Your body makes white blood cells (WBCs) at such a high rate that it makes more of them everyday than it does red blood cells (RBCs). And consider that RBCs live about 120 days, as opposed to WBCs that only live for a few minutes, hours, or only days. That is even more amazing when you consider that about 45% of your blood is RBCs and less than 1% is WBCs. I don't have the exact time, but I can surely say this, very fast and very profusely.
A few hundred to a few thousand depending on exactly what you have and condition.
Depending on condition and configuration, a few hundred to a few thousand.
Yes! All red blood cells are only hemoglobin encased in a membrane. White blood cells do not carry much hemoglobin, becasue they have every other organelle like the ER, nucleus, and golgi apparatus to name a few. Red blood cells don't even have a nucleus! Their sole purpose is to give hemoglobin to the blood. When red blood cells are being made in the marrow, they have organelles but once they are mature, everything is taken out and they become hemoglobin carriers, with nothing else. So finally, red blood cells have much more hemoglobin than white blood cells.
drought
Depends on condition. Could range from a few hundred to a few thousand.
There are no differences in the amino acids in human hemoglobin and wolf hemoglobin.