Its got an interesting combination of flavours, sort of a creamy Snake skin with a faint hint of rabbit and celery stew, and even a tinge of Salmon depending on what day of the cycle the blood is from.
Menstrual blood has fewer platelets than normal blood because if it was to clot it would be detrimental to the process. If menstrual blood were to clot like normal blood it would inhibit the blood leaving the uterus.
Menstrual blood has fewer platelets than normal blood because if it was to clot it would be detrimental to the process. If menstrual blood were to clot like normal blood it would inhibit the blood leaving the uterus.
No, they do not taste like chicken. They most likey taste like blood vessels.
No, menstrual blood is not produced in the ovary. Menstrual blood is the lining of the uterus that is shed during a woman's menstrual cycle. Thanks
nothing!exept for the fact that your friends will think that you are vampire!believe me i am the one with this problem!(i like taste of blood!
Menstrual blood is a mixture of blood and uterine lining tissue, which is not found in regular blood.
yes
Menstrual blood is different from regular blood. It contains a mix of blood, tissue, and other fluids from the uterus lining shedding during a woman's menstrual cycle.
Yes, menstrual blood is different from regular blood. Menstrual blood contains a mixture of blood, tissue, and uterine lining shed during a woman's menstrual cycle, while regular blood is mainly composed of red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma.
Blood tastes like copper because it contains iron, which gives it a metallic flavor similar to the taste of copper.
No, menstrual blood is not poisonous. It is a normal bodily fluid that is shed during a woman's menstrual cycle. It is a combination of blood and tissue from the lining of the uterus.
Menstrual blood doesn't clot like other blood because if it did it would be detrimental to the whole process of the uterine lining shedding. The 'clots' people talk about in menstrual flow are normally larger chunks of the uterine lining, normal during heavier flow days.