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2007-03-06 04:39:12 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health Diseases & Conditions Other - Diseases

2 answers

There is no difinitive answer. When you have a blood test the parameters are expressed as xx/mml, where how many red or white cells are in a teaspoon of blood. Because the amount of blood in one's body doesn't stay as a constant only a ballpark number can be achieved. So therefore a doctor will give a normal range of say 25000 to 32000 red cells/mml as normal. The same figure would be represented by white cells.

2007-03-06 04:57:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I'll start counting :-D It's probably a highly difficult question to answer,... but you could get a very rough estimate with some clever base-knowledge of the size of blood-cells,. the amount of blood we all have, (it varies I know), and the density of blood cells in any given amount of blood.

2007-03-06 04:43:47 · answer #2 · answered by wildimagination2003 4 · 0 0

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