By Brigid Monda
Our blood is a thickish red fluid pumped around the body by the heart. The average adult has six to eight litres of it. Blood is life — it feeds every cell in the body, gets rid of all the waste products, protects the body from infection and repairs any damage the body may sustain. Without it, we cannot survive. Blood is made up of two main components: Plasma, the liquid part and a large number of different types of cells that are suspended in the plasma. The plasma acts as their means of transport to all the corners of the body where they perform different functions. One group of these cells is the red blood cells that contain a red pigment called haemoglobin — which is responsible for the colour of blood. The main function of red blood cells is to transport oxygen and carbon dioxide to other parts of the body.