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
The normal ranges for women is between 3.5 - 5 million, and for men 4.3 - 5.9 million red blood cells per "drop"
Waddy H. Naing
There are about 1 billion blood cells in 2-3 drops of blood. :)
It produces lots and lots daily and because blood cells are tiny the human body needs lots and lots of blood cells
About 10 billion (10,000,000,000)2.5 million per SECOND X 60 = 150 million per MINUTE X 60 = 9 billion per HOUR9 billion47q
15 million (approx). the balance between red cell production and the removal of aging red cells from the circulation is precisely maintained. The rate of blood cell formation varies depending on the individual, but a typical production might be an average 200,000,000,000 red cells per day, 10,000,000,000 white cells per day , and 400,000,000,000 platelets per day.
Red blood cells are produces in the marrow of large bones at the rate of about 2 million per second.
The rate of blood cell formation varies depending on the individual, but a typical production might average 200,000,000,000 red cells per day, 10,000,000,000 white cells per day, and 400,000,000,000 platelets per day.
Between the range of 3 to 5 million cells per drop of blood.
White blood cells are the largest of the blood cells but also the fewest. There are only 5000 to 10,000 white blood cells per microliter. There are several different types of white cells but all are related to immunity and fighting infection. On average there are 50 microliters in one drop of blood. There are 250,000 to 500,000 white blood cells per drop of blood.
About 724 trillion cells.
yes it is true because when you body grows, trillions of blood cells are made. But sence cells are so small it does not effect you size very much.
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.
White blood cells will increase in number when you are sick. There are several types. Each will respond differently to the type of infection. One type is the eosinophil and it will show increased numbers due to allergies. The normal number of WBCs in the blood is 4,500-10,000 white blood cells per microliter (mcL).
A hemocytometer (or hemacytometer) is a tool used to count cells (red blood cells, sperm, yeast...) under the microscope. It gives the number of cells per volume of fluid.
The number of red blood cells in a ml of "horse's" blood varies with training, exertion and age. 6-8 million per ml with some high and low variation.
6,200,000,000,000 or 6.2 trillion red blood cells per liter of blood
Normal differentials vary with age , but an average adult differential should have between 4,300 and 10,800 white blood cells per cubic millimeter (cmm).
CBC on lab tests refers to "complete blood count" and will measure the number of red and white blood cells, as well as platelets, per given amount of blood.
A CBC is a complete blood count. It contains: RBC - number of red blood cells MCV - average volume of individual red blood cells MCHC - average amount of hemoglobin per red blood cell RDW - the average size of the red blood cell Hemoglobin Hematocrit WBC - number of white blood cells. If it is ordered with a differential, then they want the lab to break down the different types of white blood cells, such as neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, as monocytes.