Blood flow and rheology Lecture 3 Flashcards
What are reticulocytes?
Immature RBCs released from the bone marrow that still have endoplasmic reticulum
Describe cellular mechanical factors affecting deformation and circulation
RBCs are highly deformable as the capillary diameter is similar in size to the RBC. White cells move more slowly in capillaires and affect flow distribtion due to intermittent flow. (Can influence flow by adhering to vessel wall)
Cell geometry:
Size determines the level of deformation required
SA:V (surface area:volume ratio) determines the ability to adapt shape
Membrane:
Resistance to deformation determines rigidity
Resistance to disruption determines stability
Cytoplasm
Viscosity, cytoplasm, inclusions, organelles
How do RBCs and WBCs affect microcirculation?
RBCs capillary entry- msec whilst WBC- sec
WBCs 1000x slower, 1000x more resistance
RBCs have a steady resistance to flow
WBCs- intermittent flow and affects flow distribution Can influence flow by adhering to a vessel
Describe how the cellular mechanisms affect WBC and RBCs
WBCs have a spherical shape but a folded membrane, the excess membrane allows sufficient deformation to fit into capillaries- the cytoskeleton (1000x more viscose than RBC) of the dominant resistance factor for WBCs
RBCs have a biconcave shape with excess membrane and its cytoplasm has lower viscosity with no cytoskeleton or organelles- membrane rigidity is the dominant factor for resistance for RBCs
Describe RBC membrane structure and function
RBC membrane is supported by a network of spectrin. If this skeleton is affected, then RBCs are prone to lysis. Spectrin allows deformation and has good elasticity.
Has external glycolipids and glycoproteins attached on to the outer phospholipid leaflet and integral proteins for recognition and adhesion
Peripheral proteins also attached to integral proteins and also to spectrin tetramers that form the membrane skeleton - No cytoskeleton
Elastic membrane skeleton allows the easy deformation when the RBC is stretched in high flow or to enter capillaries
It controls the cell shape- requires ATP
Provides flexibility, stability
Contributes to homeostasis by regulating the contents and volume
Describe how blood cells behave in physiological conditions and pathological conditions
RBCs- don’t adhere normally- will in some disorders
Leucocytes- protective inflammatory, lymphocytes re-circulation
Can be out of control cause vascular occlusion and tissue damage
Platelets- haemostasis vs thrombosis
Describe leukocyte migration
1) Contact via seletins which have weak interactions in order to slow the white cells down as a result they roll.
2) Capture via rolling
3) Stop- integrin activation by activatory signals in endothelium which form a firm adhesion.
4) Spread over the endothelial cells
5) Migrate through endothelium
6) Spread under the endothelial cells and casues Chemotaxis to infection via chemokines
Describe how sickle cell and malaria affects blood rheology
Sickle cell forms a haemoglobin S polymer in deoxygenated conditions. So less deformable than RBCs
Malaria makes the cytoplasm more viscos and the membrane more rigid
Both make the RBCs more adhesive
Describe pathological WBC rheology
Abnormalities:
Vasculitis- autoantibodies activate neutrophils and become less deformable
Smoking alters shape and affects ridigty
Inflammatory mediators
Uncontrolled adhesion:
Myocardial infarction (uncontrolled inflammation and adhesion)
Shock, chronic inflammation, graft rejection, vasculitis