blood cell physiology Flashcards

red cells: explain the origin and function of red cells, recall the intravascular life span of red cells, and list the physiological factors that influence the rate of red cell production

1
Q

where do all blood cells originate in

A

bone marrow

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2
Q

what are blood cells ultimately derived from

A

multipotent haemopoietic stem cells

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3
Q

what 2 types of stem cells do multipotent haemopoietic stem cells give rise to

A

lymphoid stem cells, myeloid stem cells

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4
Q

what 4 types of cells are derived from myeloid stem cells

A

red cells (erythroid), granulocytes, monocytes, platelets (megakaryocyte)

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5
Q

how are stem cells able to self-renew and produce mature progeny

A

have ability to divide into two cells with different characteristics: one another stem cell, and the other a cell capable of differentiating to mature progeny

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6
Q

myeloid stem cell to erythrocyte maturation pathway in bone marrow (mitosis so divides into 2 etc.)

A

myeloid stem cell -> proerythroblast -> (early -> mid -> late) erythroblast (leaves nucleus behind for macrophage digestion by squeezing cytoplasm out of endothelium) -> erythrocyte

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7
Q

what is the process of red cell production called and where does it occur

A

erythropoiesis in bone marrow

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8
Q

what does erythropoiesis require, and where and when is this synthesised

A

requires erythropoietin, which is synthesised mainly in the kidney in response to hypoxia

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9
Q

% of erythropoietin synthesised in kidney and liver

A

kidney: 90%, liver: 10%

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10
Q

what cells synthesise erythropoietin in the kidney

A

juxtatubular interstitial cells

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11
Q

what cells synthesise erythropoietin in the liver

A

hepatocytes and interstitial cells

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12
Q

where is erythropoietin secreted into and where does it go

A

capillaries to reach bone marrow

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13
Q

intravascular life span of red cells and significance

A

120 days, allowing transfusion to be possible

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14
Q

main and other function of red cells

A

main function: transport oxygen, other function: transport some CO2 (most transported in plasma)

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15
Q

fate of red cells

A

destroyed by phagocytic cells of spleen (also liver and other cells of reticulo-endothelial system)

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16
Q

define anisocytosis

A

red cells that show more variation in size than normal

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17
Q

define poikilocytosis

A

red cells that show more variation in shape than normal

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18
Q

define microcytosis, and how to tell what normal size should be vs lymphocyte

A

red cells are smaller than normal; diameter of nucleus of lymphocyte should be similar to diameter of red cell

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19
Q

define macrocytosis

A

red cells are larger than normal

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20
Q

define microcyte

A

red cell smaller than normal (microcytic)

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21
Q

define macrocyte

A

red cell larger than normal (macrocytic)

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22
Q

3 specific types of macrocyte

A

round, oval or polychromatic

23
Q

why do normal red cells have about 1/3 of diameter pale

A

result of disc shape (centre has less Hb so is paler when dyed)

24
Q

define hypochromia

A

cells have a larger area of central pallor than normal (hypochromic)

25
cause of hypochromia
lower Hb content and concentration, and a flatter cell
26
what often goes with hypochromia
microcytosis as often have same underlying cause e.g. iron deficiency causing inadequate amounts of Hb, or thalassaemia B major
27
define hyperchromia
cells lack central pallor (hyperchromic)
28
2 causes of apparent hyperchromia
thicker than normal, or abnormal shape
29
2 important types of hyperchromia
spherocytes, irregularly contracted cells
30
define spherocytes
cells approx. spherical in shape so lack central pallor
31
cause of spherocyte formation
result from loss of cell membrane (e.g. hereditary where membrane not tethered to underlying cytoskeleton) without loss of equivalent amount of cytoplasm, so cell is forced to round up
32
define irregularly contracted cells
cells irregular in outline but smaller than normal cells, and have lost central pallor (irregular shape and contracted as dense and small)
33
cause of irregularly contracted cell formation
result from oxidant damage to cell membrane and Hb (e.g. some food, chemicals etc.)
34
define polychromasia
increased blue tinge to cytoplasm of red cell as ribosomes (more blue, the younger it is)
35
what does polychromasia indicate
red cell is young, as first red cell to leave bone marrow but is larger than mature erythrocyte
36
how to identify young red cells reliably so they can be counted as not subjective
reticulocyte stain, which exposes living red cells to new methylene blue, which precipitates as a network ("reticulum"); expressed as % of total red cells
37
6 poikilocyte variety of shapes
spherocytes, irregularly contracted cells, sickle, target, elliptocytes, fragments
38
define target cell
cells with an accumulation of Hb in centre of area of centrl pallor
39
when do target cells occur
obstructive jaundice, liver disease, haemoglobinopathies, hyposplenism
40
define elliptocyctes
cells elliptical in shape
41
when do elliptocytes occur
in hereditary elliptocytosis and in iron deficiency (so often larger central pallor - hypochromia - and microcytic cells)
42
define sickle cell
cells sickle or crescent shaped
43
when do sickle cells occur
result from polymerisation of haemoglobin S when present in a high concentration due to low oxygen tension
44
define fragments (schistocytes)
small pieces of red cells
45
what do fragments indicate
red cell has fragmented
46
define rouleaux
stacks of red cells (resemble pile of coins)
47
when do rouleaux occur
result from alterations in plasma proteins (normally repel each other, but if increase in Ig then repelling force negated, so common in infection)
48
agglutinates vs rouleaux
irregular clumps, not tidy stacks
49
when do agglutinates occur
result from antibody on cell surface
50
define Howell-Jolly body; where formed and removed
nuclear remnant in red cell (same dark purple colour); form in bone marrow and removed by spleen
51
commonest cause of Howell-Jolly body
lack of splenic function
52
define erythrocytosis
too many red cells
53
define reticulocytosis
too many reticulocytes (immature red cells)
54
symptom vs sign, using iron deficiency as example
symptom: something patient feels and comes to doctor about e.g. tiredness, shortness of breath; signs: something doctor detects e.g. pallor