Phagocytic cells are a type of white blood cell that helps our body stay healthy by engulfing and eating harmful substances like bacteria, viruses, and debris. They act like the body's defenders, protecting us from harmful invaders.
Full definition
L - carnitine can increase the activity
of phagocytic cells such as macrophages as well as lymphocytes including killer cells.
These commensal microbes upregulate both the adaptive and innate responses to pathogens by increasing sIgA and upregulating
phagocytic cell activity, respectively.
These results indicate that an antibody - antibiotic conjugate that is only activated after entering an
infected phagocytic cell is more efficient at eliminating a bacterial superstrain than standard antibiotics that act extracellularly.
Monocytes are a specific type of
phagocytic cells which enter the damaged muscle fiber and transform into macrophages which also produce toxins which further destroy the damaged area.
The ability of probiotic bacteria to stimulate innate and acquired immune systems in the host and
activate phagocytic cells is also thought to play a role in the inhibition of Candida spp..
The first, called phagocytosis, kills bacteria within
the phagocytic cell itself.
These phagocytic cells use ROS as a tool to take up, digest, and clear out damaged tissue.