Biology, asked by aleenaanu2004, 9 months ago

what is a plasma ? How does it differ from serum ?​

Answers

Answered by nishanth1729
0

Answer:

\huge\mathfrak{\underline{\underline{\red{Answer:-}}}}

Explanation:

A key difference between plasma and serum is that plasma is liquid, and serum is fluid. While most of the components are the same for both plasma and serum, plasma contains fibrinogen which is absent in serum. ... Plasma on the other hand, is mostly used for blood-clotting related problems

Answered by Anonymous
2

Serum and plasma both come from the liquid portion of the blood that remains once the cells are removed, but that's where the similarities end. Serum is the liquid that remains after the blood has clotted. Plasma is the liquid that remains when clotting is prevented with the addition of an anticoagulant.

hope it is helpfull to you

so please follow me

Similar questions