The primary advantages would be speed (and thus throughput) and statistical accuracy.
Automated Cell counters actually count vastly more physical cells than are normally possible with a manual cell count, even though they analyze a smaller sample by volume.
The only potential problem of note with automatic cell counters is that they can be confused by certain types of abnormal cell, which can necessitate a further manual examination if the sample. More modern cell counters will produce error cdes of various sorts wen they encounter the unusual, though this was not always the case in the past.
its cool to hold oxigen.
An RBC pipette is a specialized glass tube used in hematology to measure the number of red blood cells in a blood sample. It is designed to hold a specific volume of blood for accurate cell counting and is typically used in conjunction with a hemocytometer or automated cell counter.
The advantage of red blood cells' biconcave shape is that the surface area is increased to allow more haemoglobin to be stored in the cell. This means that the red blood cells can acquire a greater volume of oxygen than if they had a flatter membrane.
the nerve cell is the white cell and it is white but it doesnt care as much blood as the red blood cell does that's the difference. Also, the nerve cell is the white cell and it is white but the red blood carries blood. Wait, I think the nerve cell is the white cell is white. White Cell=Nerve Cell*white. Cell=Nerve/White =;)
If the cell had only a slightly higher concentration of water, this would probably be considered more of a disadvantage because water is highly damaging to DNA. Having extra water could burst the cell depending on the concentration. In face, if you take sheep's blood, and dilute it with water and view under the microscope, you can see the cells lysing. Thus, having extra water is not an advantage to the cell.
Cell indices are usually calculated from tests performed on an automated electronic cell counter.
its cool to hold oxigen.
An RBC pipette is a specialized glass tube used in hematology to measure the number of red blood cells in a blood sample. It is designed to hold a specific volume of blood for accurate cell counting and is typically used in conjunction with a hemocytometer or automated cell counter.
The white blood cell has nucleus that red blood cell does not
cell of blood
Because certain blood types are prone to certain diseases so its easier to test what works with what cell type. Not 100% positive but 87.45679% positive
The major advantage is the a secondary cell is rechargeable, and in the long run, may not cost at much as constantly replacing a primary cell.
The advantage of red blood cells' biconcave shape is that the surface area is increased to allow more haemoglobin to be stored in the cell. This means that the red blood cells can acquire a greater volume of oxygen than if they had a flatter membrane.
Both visual and automated systems are used for RBC and WBC counts.Because an automated cell counter samples and counts so many cells, the results are very precise. However, certain abnormal cells in the blood may not be identified correctly, requiring manual review.
The granule cell of the cerebellum is the smallest cell in the human body, but the red blood cell is the smallest blood cell.
yes
Their white blood cell and t-cell count will continue to drop until a disease comes and wipes them out since they are unable to produce enough white blood cells to counter the disease. when your immune system becomes compromised, like when your cell counts drop, you get a opportunistic infection, any infection really. that is what you die from. AIDS does NOT kill you.