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.

A Sloth Can Starve to Death on a Full Stomach
One unbelievable thing. Every Sunday.
60 seconds. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
🦖

Discussion (0)
Loading…