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red blood cell
noun
- Physiology. one of the cells of the blood, which in mammals are enucleate disks concave on both sides, contain hemoglobin, and carry oxygen to the cells and tissues and carbon dioxide back to the respiratory organs. : RBC
red blood cell
noun
- another name for erythrocyte
red blood cell
- Any of the oval or disc-shaped cells that circulate in the blood of vertebrate animals, contain hemoglobin, and give blood its red color. The hemoglobin in red blood cells binds to oxygen for transport and delivery to body tissues, and it transports carbon dioxide, excreted as a metabolic waste product, out of the tissues. The red blood cells of mammals have no nucleus, while those of other vertebrates do contain nuclei. Red blood cells are formed in the bone marrow.
- Also called erythrocyte
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of red blood cell1
A Closer Look
Example Sentences
And when mice were injected with these human blood stem cells in the lab, the cells were found to be good at making red blood cells - a positive sign, Dr Encabo said.
Untreated, the clots cause organ damage and low red blood cell and platelet counts.
The condition occurs at pregnancy when the mother's red blood cells are incompatible with that of their growing baby.
It is caused by genetic change that means people make haemoglobin - a key protein in red blood cells - that doesn't work properly.
The effect of haemodialysis is said to mimic the effect of carbon dioxide in the blood – which increases the pH or alkalinity inside red blood cells.
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