Blood Flashcards

1
Q

Name the functions of blood

A

Transport oxygen from lungs to body, CO2 from body to lungs, nutrients from intestines to body organs, wastes from body to kidneys, hormones and enzymes, and cells of the immune system.
Regulate body temperature
Protect against blood loss by clotting
Connective tissue

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2
Q

Plasma make up

A

55% of blood is plasma. 92% of plasma is water. Contains ions, nutrients, wastes, hormones. three main proteins: albumin, globulins, fibrinogen. and regulatory proteins

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3
Q

Albumin

A

gives blood viscosity, responsible for the colloid pressure which draws fluid from interstitial space back into the blood vessels. maintains osmolarity
most abundant plasma protein

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4
Q

Globulins

A

antibodies, aka immunoglobulins. 37% of plasma proteins.

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5
Q

Fibrinogen

A

element of coagulation. clotting factors convert fibrinogen into long insoluble strands called fibrin. When centrifuged, clotted blood will separate and you can get a fluid called serum without the clotting factors

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6
Q

Regulatory protein

A

enzymes and hormones, less than 1% of plasma proteins

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7
Q

Erthrocytes

A

about 45% of blood, males have slightly more. main purpose to transport O2 and CO2
Anucleate

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8
Q

Hematocrit or Packet Cell Volume

A

the RBC volume/total cell volume. males 40-50%, females 36-44%

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9
Q

Erythropoiesis

A

production of RBCs, occurs in red bone marrow which is close to midline. stimulated by erythopoietin

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10
Q

Bone marrow

A

2 types, red: actively produces blood cells and yellow: can produce cells and become red.
At birth all is red

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11
Q

Hemoglobin

A

and RBC is 97% hemoglobin which is an oxygen carrying protein

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12
Q

Dead RBCs

A

recycled by macrophages in the spleen. heme is degraded to bilirubin, transported to liver and made into bile. iron goes into the bloodstream and is used in the red marrow.

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13
Q

Jaundice

A

too much bilirubin in blood, excessive RBC destruction, insufficient liver manufacture of biliverdin (bile)

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14
Q

blood typing

A

glycoproteins and glycolipids are surface antigens on cell membranes of all cells.

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15
Q

Type A

A

has A antigens on the RBC. has type B antibodies present in plasma

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16
Q

Type AB

A

has both A and B antigens on the RBC therefore has neither antibody

17
Q

Type O

A

has neither A or B antigens, therefore has both A and B antibodies. universal donor

18
Q

Rh factor

A

Antigen D. Rh positive has D antigen, no anti-D antibodies. Rh negative is opposite

19
Q

Hemolytic disease

A

Rh negative mother can carry an Rh positive fetus. when exposed to the blood of Rh+ fetus, Rh- mother produces anti D antibodies. avoided by giving synthetic anti D antibodies to mother

20
Q

Leukocytes

A

mobile army. function outside of the blood vessels in the connective tissue. larger than RBCs but fewer in number
Produced in bone marrow and released continuously

21
Q

Chemotaxis

A

move toward a site by following chemical attractants

22
Q

Diapedesis

A

move into the tissues through small openings between the endothelial cells of capillaries and post-capillary venules, due to chemotaxis

23
Q

Neutrophils

A

multi-lobed nuclei. most abundant. defense against bacterial infections. active phagocytosis, quick to site of infection as first line of defense. granules are digestive enzymes to digest bacteria. can also release enzymes extra cellularly

24
Q

Eosinophils

A

nucleus has two lobes (earmuffs), 2-4% of white blood cells. fight parasite infections, mediate allergic reactions, and phagocytosis of antigen/antibody complex, granules are digestive enzymes

25
Q

Basophils

A

nucleus has 2 lobes connected in U shape (basically just a big blob), 1% of WBCs, release histamine during allergic reaction, function similar to mast cells in tissues

26
Q

Monocytes

A

nucleus is dark and kidney shaped. 3-8% of WBCs, precursor to the macrophage but found in the circulatory system

27
Q

Lymphocytes

A

large, dark nucleus. 20-25% of WBCs. major component of immune system. T and B lymphocytes. produced in bone marrow

28
Q

B-lymphocytes

A

stimulated against an antigen, become plasma cells and make antibodies against the antigen, then the antigen-antibody complex phagocytized by macrophage. educated in Bone marrow

29
Q

T-lymphocytes

A

T-helper (stimulate B-lymphocytes and T-cytotoxic) and T-cytotoxic cells (cell-to-cell killers). Educated in Thymus.

30
Q

Platelets

A

not actual cells, fragments enclosed by plasma membrane. derived from megakaryocytes
Blood clot formation

31
Q

Blood clot formation

A

1: fibrin, from fibrinogen in plasma, forms a network with platelets to trap the RBCs in to a clot
2-actin and myosin fibers contract to tighten clot and close laceration

32
Q

High neutrophil count

A

bacterial infection

33
Q

High eosinophil count

A

parasite infection or allergies

34
Q

Low hematocrit or RBC count

A

anemic

35
Q

Hematopoiesis

A

blood cell formation, occurs in bone marrow. all blood cells originate from stem cells which differentiate into myeloid stem cells (all blood cells except lymphocytes) and lymphoid cell (form lymphocytes)