composition/features of blood - L21 Flashcards
innate vs adaptive immune
innate are rapid, not specific to pathogens (includes external 1st line and internal 2nd line defence)
adaptive are slower, specific to pathogens (only 3rd line of defence), has memory
complement pathway activation
3 arms (ways of activation) - classical (antibodies), lectin (carbohydrates), alternative (senses bacteria surface)
complement pathway summary
complement components break down proteolytic cascade –> anaphylotoxins (e.g. c3a c3b) attract and activate phagocytes in opsonisation when convertases permanently bind in bacterial membrane–> lytic pores form MAC after c5 for lytic digestion
coagulation pathway activation and their factors
two arms (ways of activation):
intrinsic (contact w surfaces) or extrinsic (tissue damage)
intrinsic has factors 8,9,10,11,12
extrinsic has factors 5,7,10
coagulation pathway summary
both pathways have factor X –> factor Xa turns prothrombin into thrombin –> cleaves fibrinogen into many fibrins –> fibrins forms clot
declot pathway and TPA
plasminogen activation turns into plasmin which breaks down fibrin molecules
Tissue Plasminogen Activator can be injected to break down clots (treats myocardial infarction)
how haemoglobin works in gas exchange?
4 heme proteins have Fe (II) in middle
Iron binds O2
in venous blood O2 pressure is low so O2 dissociates into tissues, CO2 pressure high so CO2 associates to heme
in lung alveoli O2 pressure high so binds to heme, CO2 low so CO2 dissociates from heme
major blood proteins
albumin - nearly 50% of blood proteins, maintains colloidal osmotic pressure (buffer against water movement), binds /transports small molecules (hormones)
fibrinogen - 7% of blood proteins, forms cross-linked fibrin clot via coagulation
blood cell differentiation
all from multipotent CD23 stem cell –> myeloid: erythrocytes, megakaryocytes, monocytes, mast cells, eosinophil, basophil, neutrophil
lymphoid: B cells, T cells
immunoglobins and multiple myeloma
antibodies produced by B cells
multiple myeloma - form of leukemia where malignant B cells overproduce one antibody. Diagnosed by serum electrophoresis by sharp peak in gamma band
functions of electrolytes
HCO3-, creatine, creatinine act as buffers to changes in pH
Na+, Cl- water movement, channels
Mg+, Ca ++(essential for clotting), K+ control tissue function
antibodies study
serology studies antibodies to see whether someone is infected, past infections, how long immunity lasts etc
antigen structure
antigens make pathogens immunogenic and are reactive to antibodies and cells
have several epitopes (small parts of antigen that receptor binds to)
2 functions of blood pressure
1.) even blood flow through capillaries which require high pressure to force through because thin
2.) high enough to prevent coagulation but low enough that vessels don’t rupture
hypotension vs hypertension
hyper=high blood pressure > 130
hypo=low blood pressure <100
default esp in aorta is 120/80 (when left ventricle contracts/when heart relaxed)