Spleen.
White blood cells help to clear away dead cells by engulfing and breaking them down through a process called phagocytosis. This helps to remove dead cells and prevent the buildup of cellular debris, which can be harmful if left unchecked.
White blood cells, specifically phagocytes, are responsible for destroying dead and damaged cells in the blood. Phagocytes engulf and digest these cells to clean up and maintain the health of the blood.
They die in the vessels, but the spleen has special cells that go to dissolve the dead red blood cells. We actually excrete them when we go to the toilet its the dead blood and bile juices that give the excrement the dark brown look.
kidneys
Pus is an exudate which contains dead and dying neutrophils (a type of white blood cells).
white blood cells
White blood cells help to clear away dead cells by engulfing and breaking them down through a process called phagocytosis. This helps to remove dead cells and prevent the buildup of cellular debris, which can be harmful if left unchecked.
White blood cells, specifically phagocytes, are responsible for destroying dead and damaged cells in the blood. Phagocytes engulf and digest these cells to clean up and maintain the health of the blood.
the neutrophis they are known as pus cells
Spleen
You have cells that continuously go to it as well as blood. If your dead, your blood and cells are not moving therefore your eyes don't get the coloration they are supposed to, because of lack of blood
Dead white cells and bacteria
The liver is important in removing dead red blood cells because it breaks the dead red blood cells into bilirubin which is coverted to bile and stored in the gall bladder and ferratin which is converted to iron and stored in the liver
lungs
You would die if you took out all of your blood cells
white blood cells
In Bone Marrow, where they replace ones that die in the blood. Dead red blood cells sink to the bottom of the blood vessel where they are "cleaned" (eaten) by special cells.