They can cause iron deficiency and a condition called anemia which is a lower than
normal number of red blood cells.
Anemia (uh - NEE - me - uh) is a condition in which your blood has a lower than
normal number of red blood cells.
Not exact matches
In a third
of MDS cases, over time, very immature bone marrow
cells called blasts may increase in
number and fill the bone marrow, displacing the
normal red and white
blood cells and platelets that are produced there.
In general, a complete
blood count, which measures the
numbers of red and white
cells in the
blood will vary from the
normal when the immune system is in the midst
of an autoimmune flare up.
Climb Mount Everest, do an Ironman triathlon, or do whatever reason you're doing this aerobic exercise is so I wouldn't worry too much about something like low to
normal hematocrit or hemoglobin levels or low
red blood cell size if you're kinda testing yourself in the midst
of your training and it's not during a taper or a rest period, one would expect those
numbers to kinda be higher up.
Anemia is defined as a reduction in the
normal number of circulating
red blood cells, which are called RBCs or erythrocytes.
The signs that we see in dogs are usually related to decreased
numbers of normal cells (such as
red blood cells which carry oxygen, white
blood cells that fight infection and platelets that help with clotting) which are made in the bone marrow.