Your immune system dies every three days
While red blood cells last for months, most white blood cells survive for only 1 to 3 days in your bloodstream.

Most of the white blood cells patrolling your body right now will be dead by Tuesday. While your red blood cells live a long, stable life of about 120 days, the average white blood cell survives for only 1 to 3 days.
These cells are the disposable infantry of your immune system. They are designed to hunt, engage, and often destroy themselves in the process of neutralizing a threat.
When you see pus from an infection, you are looking at a mass graveyard of millions of white blood cells that died in combat. Your bone marrow has to work at a furious pace to keep up, churning out 100 billion new white blood cells every single day.
Some specialist cells, like B and T memory cells, are the exception. They can live for years or even decades, acting as the 'veterans' that remember how to fight a specific virus you encountered in childhood.
This constant cycle of birth and death means your entire internal defense force is almost entirely new every week.

You replace 330 billion cells every day
You're not the same person you were last month.
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