Blood is 90-92% water, but what gives it the color is plasma.
The blood plasma is the fluid that contains the contents of the blood, such as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, etc. 50% of blood is plasma, 48% is Red blood cells, Less than 2% is white blood cells, and less than 1% are platelets.
Plasma is the fluid portion of unclotted blood. After blood clots, the fluid that remains is referred to as serum. The fluid portion of the blood is called plasma.
Extremity is the medical term meaning distant part.
Blood is what a chemist would describe as an aqueous solution; the liquid part is simply water.
Blood is what a chemist would describe as an aqueous solution; the liquid part is simply water.
Ischemia is the medical term meaning restricting blood flow to a body part.
Plasma.
Blood is what a chemist would describe as an aqueous solution; the liquid part is simply water.
Plasma is the liquid part of blood.
No, platelets are one of the solid components of blood.
The liquid part of blood is called plasma. Plasma is a yellowish fluid that makes up about 55% of the total volume of blood and carries nutrients, hormones, and waste products throughout the body.
Your question is unclear - the liquid which carries red and white blood cells and platelets is blood. These cells are the solid component of blood, which separates from the liquid part (plasma) when centrifuged.
Your question is unclear - the liquid which carries red and white blood cells and platelets is blood. These cells are the solid component of blood, which separates from the liquid part (plasma) when centrifuged.
plasma