If the blood specimen from a dermal puncture is clotted before being mixed with the anticoagulant in the micro collection container, it will not be suitable for testing.
<h3>Why clotted blood cannot be used for testing?</h3>
In order to stop the loss of blood from damaged blood arteries, tissues, or organs, blood coagulation is a process where circulating components in the blood system are transformed into a gel with insoluble properties. The body creates a blood clot out of fibrin and platelets (thrombocytes) when a blood vessel (a vein or an artery) is wounded in order to stop further blood loss. Blood clots can still develop in the body even when no blood vessels are damaged. An embolus is a clot or a portion of a clot that separates and starts to move around the body.
Clotting has a negative impact on our automated hematology analyzer and unpredictably invalidates cell counts resulting in errors while testing.
To learn more about blood clotting visit:
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Answer:
+1
Explanation:
because when an atom loses an electron it gains
The answer is B. 25°C.
A temperature of 25°C can be considered as a room temperature. It is an optimal temperature for the most living beings which cell potential is considered as standard. It is known that at 100°C water boils, so this temperature cannot be standard, cells will degrade at this temperature. Similarly 0°C and –273°C are too cold, water of the cells will freeze, cells will freeze, and cell potential will not be optimal.
I hope this helps you very much you’re welcome !
Answer:
What do they look like?
Glaciers look like solid blocks of ice.
What climate do they exist in?
Regions that have high snowfall in winter and cool temperatures in summer.
Where can you find them?
Most of the world's glacial ice is found in Antarctica and Greenland, but glaciers are found on nearly every continent, even Africa.
What do you think we can learn from glaciers?
Glaciers preserve bits of atmosphere from thousands of years ago in these tiny air bubbles, or, deeper within the core, trapped within the ice itself. This is one way scientists know that there have been several Ice Ages. Scientists are also finding that glaciers reveal clues about global warming.
(The last question is unclear to me, so I'm going to take a guess as to what you meant)
Why is sea ice so important?
Arctic sea ice keeps the polar regions cool and helps moderate global climate.
I hope this helps!! :3