Blood Groups Flashcards

1
Q

how many blood group systems are there?

A

26

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2
Q

what are the most important blood group systems?

A

ABO and Rhesus

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3
Q

when do IgG antibodies mainly occur?

A
  • exposure to blood transfusions

- foeto-maternal transmission

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4
Q

why might IgM antibodies occur?

A

due to components in food which mimic A and B antigens

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5
Q

what is H substance?

A
  • a precursor to each of the ABO blood group antigens

- found on chromosome 19

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6
Q

which genes code for substance H?

A

FUT1 and FUT2

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7
Q

what do FUT1 and FUT2 genes code for?

A

H substance

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8
Q

what do A and B genes code for?

A

glucosyl transferases - add further sugar groups

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9
Q

on what chromosome are A and B genes found?

A

9

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10
Q

what naturally occurring antibodies are found in antigen O?

A

anti-A, anti-B

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11
Q

what naturally occurring antibodies are found in antigen A?

A

anti-B

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12
Q

what naturally occurring antibodies are found in antigen B?

A

anti-A

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13
Q

what naturally occurring antibodies are found in antigen AB?

A

none

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14
Q

what antigens are there in the Rhesus system?

A
  • c
  • C
  • D
  • e
  • E
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15
Q

what does rhesus negative imply?

A

D negative

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16
Q

how are rhesus antibodies acquired?

A
  • not naturally occurring
  • IgG antibodies, acquired through exposure to Rh-positive blood
  • develop in response to pregnancy or transfusion
17
Q

how does haemolytic disease of newborns occur?

A
  1. foetal red cells carrying antigens from father transfer into maternal circulation
  2. mother produces IgG antibodies to e.g D, c, E, Kell
  3. antibodies cross placenta causing:
    - anaemia
    - jaundice
    - brain damage
    - foetal death
18
Q

how is rhesus D prevented/immunised against?

A
  • anti-D prophylaxis given to D negative mothers at 28 weeks and delivery (40 weeks)
  • kleihauer test looks for foetal cells in maternal circulation
  • foetal monitoring by ultrasound
  • can receive intra-uterine transfusion
19
Q

what are acute haemolytic reactions and how do they occur?

A
  • pre-existing antibodies
  • usually due to mis-matched blood
  • ABO most serious
20
Q

what are different types of transfusion reactions that can occur?

A
  • acute haemolytic reactions
  • delayed haemolytic reactions
  • urticaria or anaphylaxis (drugs or plasma proteins)
  • febrile reactions (HLA antibodies)