Nowhere special, it just dies in the body, and is replaced when it does.
First the animal would go into shock, oxygen transport would stop and the animal would die...assuming the question refers to all the red blood cells being removed.
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.
They do not divide. The process by which red blood cells are produced is called erythropoiesis. Red blood cells are continuously being produced in the red bone marrow of large bones, at a rate of about 2 million per second.But many people might wonder "how we could produce so many red cells each second without chromosomes which hold a cell's directions for HOW to divide and multiply!" The answer lies in realizing that, unlike many tissue types (skin, muscle, live, etc) that divide and produce two mature tissue cells, red blood cells go through several stages of developmentActually, a human red blood cell DOES have chromosomes, and they DO divide. But, as noted above, this situation exists only in the early life stagesof a red blood cell ( that is, the early stages of erythropoiesis) and these stages take place only in the bone marrow. All the dividing occurs during a red blood cells "infancy", so to speak. (You wouldn't recognize them though, as each is a big cell with a big nucleus - nothing like the common, tiny, nucleus-free "adult" red blood cells. By the time it's an adult, a red blood cell will have lost it's nucleus.) The mature adult red blood cellsdrawn from someone's vein are only the final stage in a red blood cell's life, but for most people these are the only red blood cells they have ever seen.So, although it is true for the red blood cells you've probably seen, try making a small change in your mindset from "theydo not divide", to ""Adult red blood cells do not divide". That solves the mystery. (Besides, they don't have to! Did that; been there. Now they get to coast - as tiny, flexible oxygen delivery guys.) -John Bohn, MD
Red blood cells do not go through osmosis because they lack a nucleus and organelles needed for osmosis. Instead, they rely on diffusion to exchange gases such as oxygen and carbon dioxide across their cell membrane.
Red blood cells are produced in the bone marrow through a process called hematopoiesis and are released into the bloodstream to circulate throughout the body. Their life span is typically around 120 days before they are removed by the spleen and liver.
Nowhere special, it just dies in the body, and is replaced when it does.
Through bone marrow
White blood cell count goes down. Red stays the same.
red blood cells carry oxygen around the body and provide us with the oxygen then say the red blood cell is O the circumference is blood and the empty area in the middle is oxygen they last for i think about 3 months then die then go to the liver and get neutralised and the liver makes another. so red blood cells are critical for life
Hypotonic means that the concentration gradient is lower than what ever your comparing it to (in this case a red blood cell) since the net movement of solute goes from high to low concentration gradient solutes will move out of the red blood cell causing water to go into the cell. This will cause the cell to swell up and eventually Lyse.
Nothing will happen to a red blood cell in an isotonic solution. An isotonic solution means that the amount of solvent in the solution is the same inside the cell as it is outside the cell. Osmosis occurs, but the water going into the cell equals the water leaving the cell. A red blood cell in a hypotonic solution will burst because more water will go into the cell than the water leaving it. A red blood cell in a hypertonic solution will shrivel up because more water will leave the cell than go into it.
First the animal would go into shock, oxygen transport would stop and the animal would die...assuming the question refers to all the red blood cells being removed.
An increase in white blood cells (leukocytosis) often occurs in response to infections, inflammation, stress, or certain medical conditions like leukemia. Conversely, a decrease in red blood cells (anemia) can result from factors such as blood loss, nutritional deficiencies (like iron or vitamin B12), or bone marrow disorders. When the body is fighting an infection, it may prioritize producing more white blood cells at the expense of red blood cell production, leading to this imbalance.
i'm not sure, go look around on the internet, maybe you will find something on it like im trying to do where is the blood cells located
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.
The mosquito injects its saliva containing parasite into the bloodstream. These parasites travel then travel to the liver where they develop, multiply, and rupture. They go back to circulation and enter the red blood cells eventually attacking and destroying them. The parasites in the red blood cell do not go back to the bloodstream. Instead, they block the small blood vessels in the brain and lungs that may cause the patient to go into coma and eventually, death.
Just make sure that your body had a low concentration of salt also remember you red blood cells are Selectively Permeable. Which means things can go in but not come out. use your common knowledge about what is said earlier