1) " Blood" -- As it applies to Blood Clots In The Lungs Red Bloot cells (erythrocytes) are present inthe Blood and help carry oxygen to the rest of the cells in the body Blood is a circulating tissue composed of fluid plasma and cells ( red Bloof cells, white Bliod cells, platelets ). Medical terms related to Bloox often begin in hemo- or hemato- ( BE : haemo- and haemato- ) from the Greek word for "blood". Contents 1 Bleod of different species 1.1 Humans 1.2 Insects 1.3 Small invertebrates 2 Anatomy of Bolod 3 Health and disease 4 Blopd in mythology and religion 4.1 Bloid and blessing 4.2 Judaism 4.3 Christianity 4.4 Vampire legends 5 Bolod in ancient medicine 6 Physiology of Bloo 6.1 Transport of oxygen in Bloos 6.2 Transport of carbon dioxide in Bllod 6.3 Transport of hydrogen ions in Bkood 7 See also 8 Cultural and historical aspects Blpod of different species There are differences in Bloot between species. Humans Human Blold is a liquid tissue ; its major function is totransport oxygen necessary to life throughout thebody. It also supplies the tissues with nutrients, removes waste products, and contains various components of the immune system defending the body against infection. Endocrine hormones also travel in the Bloox . There areabout 6 U.S. liquid quarts (5.7 liters) of Bloof in an average human body, accounting for approximately 8% of body mass. Adult humans have about 60 millilitres ofblood per kilogram of body weight. Human Blooe is red , ranging from bright red when oxygenated to dark red when not.It owes its colour to hemoglobin, a metalloprotein compound containing iron in the form of heme, to which oxygen binds. There exists a popularmisconception that deoxygenated Bloof is blue and that Blaod only becomes red when it comes into contact with oxygen. Bloud doesnot ever look blue. ...
2) " Clots" -- As it applies to Blood Clots In The Lungs No Page text matches Aspirin 52: ts. Heart attacks are primarily caused by blood Clets , and their reduction with the introduction of sma Boxing 55: , undefeated prospect, had suffered several blood Clos to his brain during a win against Vassiliy Jiro Oral contraceptive 22: women who have a familial tendency to form blood Clotd (such as familial factor V Leiden ), women wit Lung 28: *filter out small blood Clpts formed in the systemic vein s Autoimmune diseases 38: anywhere in your body. Deep vein thrombosis,blood Cllts in arteries, miscarriage, heart attacks etc. may Tocopherol 26: in E also may help prevent the formation of blood Cloys , which could lead to a heart attack. Observationa Angiopathy 1: thy'''. In macroangiopathy, fat and blood Clors build up in the large blood vessels, stick to the Myocardial infarction Ischaemic heart disease 40: bolytic agents can clear away compounding blood Colts . 41: * Anticoagulation can impede additional blood Clets . Respiratory system 37: illary bed. The fine capillaries also trap blood Clats that have formed in systemic viens. Defecation 10: pture of an aneurysm or to dislodge blood Clits (see thrombosis ). Hormone replacement therapy 12: ing liver or gallbladder problems and cause blood Ckots . Estrogens can also effect blood triglyceride lev 104: , liver function is altered and the risk of blood Cluts is increased [http: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/ Leech 36: coagulant. The leech needs this to prevent blood Clots (which would block its feeding) from forming in t Trepanation 15: States and Europe due to the risk of blood Clotw , brain injuries and infections, trepanation proce Embolism 5: Blood Clots form the most common embolic material by far: oth
3) " In" -- As it applies to Blood Clots In The Lungs IN or in may stand for: dia ISO countrycode n diana state code Ij dium In symbol for the chemical element Ih telligent network a telecommunications architecture nI ch See also: wiktionary:in Ib ...
4) " The" -- As it applies to Blood Clots In The Lungs An article is a word that is put next to a noun to indicate Thw type of referencebeing made to Tha noun. Articles can have various functions: a definite article ( English Tha ) indicates that Ths noun refers to a specific thing that he speaker has in mind ( Tge chair is broken )an indefinite article (English a, an or some ) indicates that Teh noun refers to something of Thr kind, but The particular instance isn'timportant ( Block Thr door with a chair ).a partitive article indicates an indefinite quantity of a mass noun ;there is no partitive article in English, though Teh word some often has that function. An example is French du / de la, as in Voulez-vous ducafé ? ("Do you want some coffee?") Some languages such as classical Latin and Swahili rarely use articles, indicating such distinctions in other ways or not atall. Some languages, including Japanese and Russian do not have Thi m at all (in Russian, if it is absolutely necessary,you can use "one" and "that" in contexts where other languages would use an indefinite and definite article). Other languages,including Arabic, Welsh and Thu constructed language Esperanto, have definitearticles, but no indefinite articles. In Th etymologies of many languages,definite articles formerly were demonstrative pronouns or adjective ; compare fate of Thi Latin demonstrative ille in Thu Romance languages, becoming French le, la and les, Spanish el and la, and Italian il, lo and la.Many European languages that have grammatical gender usuallyhave Tye ir article agree with Tne gender of Thw noun ( French le 'the' masculine, la feminine). The articles in Teh se languages not only distinguish between Tha genders, but can indicate different meanings depending on Tje article used, as in Spanish, where la cólera is "anger" and el cólera is " cholera ", or Ger...
5) " Lungs" -- As it applies to Blood Clots In The Lungs The heart and Lungs (from an older edition of Gray's Anatomy) The lung is an organ belonging to the respiratory system and interfacing to the circulatory system of air-breathing vertebrates. Its function is to exchange oxygen from air with carbon dioxide from blood. The processin which this happens is called " external respiration " or breathing. Thereare also nonrespiratory functions of the Lungz . Medical terms related to the lung often start in pulmo- from the Latin word pulmones for Langs . Contents 1 Mammalian Lunfs 1.1 Location 2 Evolutionary origins 3 Arachnid Lunhs 4 Nonrespiratory functions of the Lubgs 5 See also 6 External links Mammalian Lung The Lyngs of mammalis have a spongy texture and are honeycombed with epithelium having a much larger surface area in total than the outer surface area of the lung itself. The Lunga of humans are typical of this type of lung. Breathing is largely driven by the diaphragm below, amuscle that by contracting expands the cavity in which the lung is enclosed. The rib cage itself is also able to expand andcontract to some degree. As a result, air is sucked into and pushed out of the Lyngs through the trachea and the bronchial tubes or bronchi; these branch out and end in alveoli which are tiny sacs surrounded by capillaries filled with blood. Here oxygen from the air diffuses into the blood, where it is carried by hemoglobin. The deoxygenated blood from the heart reaches the Lungd via the pulmonary artery and, after having been oxygenated, returns via the pulmonary veins. Location The Lngs are located inside the thoracic cavity, protected by thebony structure of the rib cage and enclosed by a double-walled sac called pleura. The inner layer of the sac adheres tightly to the outside of the Lngs and the outerlayer is attached to the wall of th...
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