PBL ILO’s Flashcards
Structure of erythrocytes
Diameter of 7-8 µm possessing an atypical structure in comparison to most other body cells
The RBC structure resembles a donut, they are biconcave wherein their periphery is thicker than their central portion. Courtesy to this feature, the total surface of the cell membrane is maximised enabling exchange of gases and their transport.
These cells are anuclear and do not have any other intracellular organelles as they are lost in erythropoiesis. There are two main structures – cytoplasm engirdled by a cell membrane.
Cytoplasm – filled with haemoglobin
Cell membrane – a lipid layer containing two types of membrane proteins – peripheral and integral.
Function of erythrocytes
• Delivers oxygen from the lungs to the tissues all through the body
• Facilitates carbon dioxide transport
• Acts as a buffer and regulates hydrogen ion concentration
• Contributes to blood viscosity
• Carries blood group antigens and Rh factor
Types of haemoglobin in adults and babies and what could abnormal haemoglobin cause?
Normal Results
In adults, these are normal percentages of different hemoglobin molecules:
• HbA: 95% to 98% (0.95 to 0.98)
• HbA2: 2% to 3% (0.02 to 0.03)
• HbE: Absent
• HbF: 0.8% to 2% (0.008 to 0.02)
• HbS: Absent
• HbC: Absent
In infants and children, these are normal percentage of HbF molecules:
○ HbF (newborn): 50% to 80% (0.5 to 0.8)
○ HbF (6 months): 8%
○ HbF (over 6 months): 1% to 2%
What Abnormal Results Mean
Significant levels of abnormal hemoglobins may indicate:
• Haemoglobin C disease
• Rare haemoglobinopathy
• Sickle cell anaemia
• Inherited blood disorder in which the body makes an abnormal form of haemoglobin (thalassemia)
You may have false normal or abnormal results if you have had a blood transfusion within 12 weeks of this test.
What is erythropoiesis?
Erythropoiesis is the process which produces red blood cells, which is the development from erythropoietic stem cell to mature red blood cell. It is stimulated by decreased O₂ in circulation, which is detected by the kidneys, which then secrete the hormone erythropoietin.
Erythropoiesis stages
Proerythroblast: large cell with cytoplasm that stains dark blue
Give rise to erythroblasts (early & late)
Normoblasts: smaller cells
Cytoplasm starts to stain lighter blue
Late normoblasts have extruded nucleus (becoming more mature)
Reticulocyte: contain some ribosomal RNA
Circulates in peripheral blood (1-2 days)
Endpoint: Mature erythrocyte
RNA lost
Duration: approx 7 days
Lifespan: 120 days
175 billion new red blood cells per day
Destruction of erythrocytes
90% in liver, spleen and lymph nodes:
The macrophage breaks down globin into amino acids and iron which moves to bone marrow
The Haem group is transformed into bilirubin which enters the blood plasma and travels to the liver and then to the kidney or combines with bile in the intestines
10% in blood circulation:
Haemolysis
Ends up in blood plasma and eventually picked up by macrophage
What is the role of a platelet?
Platelets are made by megakaryocytes. Their lifespan is 10 days. The normal count is 150000 – 450000 /mm3. Their role is to clump together (platelet aggregation) and plug gaps where blood clots need to form.
How is a platelet formed?
Myeloid stem cell -> megakaryoblast -> promegakaryocyte -> megakaryocytes -> platelets
Structure of a platelet
• Membrane network = dense tubular network within cell
• have no nucleus
• they are fragments of cytoplasm from the megakaryocytes
• contain dense bodies and alpha granules
○ Alpha (contains proteins) = factor XIII, platelet activating factor, PDGF, vWF, fibrinogen + platelet factor 4
○ Dense (contains non proteins) = ADP + Ca2+ (needed for contraction and bind to vitamin K dependent factors)
• Biconvex shape
• Plasma membrane has:
○ Glycoprotein coat - needs proteins for receptors
○ Lipid bilayer
• Cytoskeleton = actin, tubulin and spectrin (important for maintenance of cell shape + activation)
• Thrombocytopenia
• Thrombocytosis
Not enough platelets
Too many platelets
Where are platelets found?
Peripheral blood and spleen
Platelet activation and aggregation
PLATELET ACTIVATION AND AGGREGATION
1. Platelets get exposed to endothelial damage
○ Exposed to vWF, collagen etc leads to activation
2. Intracellular signalling causes release of granules and generation of thromboxane
3. Secondary mediators reinforce the platelets activation and activate further platelets
4. Thrombin generation causes further activation of platelets
5. Intracellular signalling leads to integrin activation
6. Active integrin binds fibrinogen and causes platelet aggregation
7. This forms the platelet aggregate primary plug
8. Thrombin converts fibrinogen in the platelet aggregate to cross linked fibrin
○ This forms the secondary haemostatic plug = thrombus
Types of leukocytes
Neutrophils (infection)
Eosinophils (allergic response and parasite infections)
Basophils
Monocytes (become macrophages and engulf pathogens)
Lymphocytes (release T cells and b cells to fight viruses)
Neutrophils
What type of cell is it?
Structure
Function
Lifespan
Abundance
Haematopoiesis Process
Neutrophils
Granulocyte and Phagocyte
They have a characterise multilobed nucleus, with 3-5 lobes joined by slender genetic material.
First cell when body is exposed to infection and mature neutrophils (polymorphonuclear neutrophils) ingest microorganisms, help defence of body as they are actively phagocytic.
Lifespan is 5 days with a further 1-2 days in circulation.
Most abundant – about 50-70%
1. Myeloid stem cell 2. Myeloblast (varying size, large nucleus, no cytoplasmic granules 3. Promyelocytes (primary cytoplasmic granules) 4. Myelocytes (smaller cells with specific cytoplasmic granules, no noticeable nucleoli) 5. Metamyelocytes (indented or horse-shoe nucleus, lots of cytoplasmic granules.
Esenophil
What type of cell is it?
Structure
Function
Lifespan
Abundance
Haematopoiesis Process
Granulocyte and Phagocyte
Larger cytoplasmic granules, tend not to have more than 3 lobes.
Provide protection against parasite infections.
Involved in the allergic responses.
Lifespan is 8-12 hours in circulation and a further 8-12 days in tissue.
Compose 1-4% of all circulating leukocytes.
1. Myeloid stem cell 2. Myeloblast (varying size, large nucleus, no cytoplasmic granules 3. Promyelocytes (primary cytoplasmic granules) 4. Myelocytes (smaller cells with specific cytoplasmic granules, no noticeable nucleoli) 5. Metamyelocytes (indented or horse-shoe nucleus, lots of cytoplasmic granules.
Basophils
What type of cell is it?
Structure
Function
Lifespan
Abundance
Haematopoiesis Process
Basophils
Granulocyte and Phagocyte
Usually consist of 2 nuclear segments, cytoplasmic granules contain heparin and histamine.
They mature in tissues to form mast cells.
Both play a role in hypersensitivity – release inflammatory molecules such as histamine to defend body from allergens, pathogens and parasites.
Basophils also release enzymes to improve blood flow and prevent blood clots.
Life span – 60 – 70 hours.
Rare in normal peripheral blood (less than 1% of leukocytes)
1. Myeloid stem cell 2. Myeloblast (varying size, large nucleus, no cytoplasmic granules 3. Promyelocytes (primary cytoplasmic granules) 4. Myelocytes (smaller cells with specific cytoplasmic granules, no noticeable nucleoli) 5. Metamyelocytes (indented or horse-shoe nucleus, lots of cytoplasmic granules.
Monocytes
What type of cell is it?
Structure
Function
Lifespan
Haematopoiesis Process
Monocytes
Phagocyte
Spherical cell with prominent surface ruffles and blebs
Made in bone marrow and travels through the blood to tissues in the body where it differentiates to becomes a macrophage or a dendritic cell when body is exposed to a foreign body.
Macrophages are innate immune cells which are involved in the detection, phagocytosis and destruction of bacteria and other harmful organism.
20-40 hours
2. Myeloid stem cell 3. Monoblast (first committed cell) 4. Promonocyte (large cell with indented nucleus only found in bone marrow 5. Monocyte (stay for 20-40 hours in peripheral blood circulation, the nucleus is kidney shaped) 6. Macrophages (migrate to tissues and mature)
Lymphocytes
Structure
Function
Lifespan
Abundance
Haematopoiesis Process
Lymphocytes
3 types of lymphocytes:
T cells
B cells
Natural killer cells
Blood T and B cells are indistinguishable on light and electron microscopy
NK cells tend to be larger cells with relatively large granules scattered in their cytoplasm.
T cells:
responsible for cell-mediated cytotoxic reactions and for delayed hypersensitivity responses. T lymphocytes also produce the cytokines that regulate immune responses and provide helper activity for B cells
B cells:
B lymphocytes can capture, internalize, and present antigens to T cells and are the precursors of immunoglobulin-secreting plasma cells
Natural killer cell:
NK cells account for innate immunity against infectious agents and transformed cells that have altered expression of transplantation antigens
T cells:
30–160 days
B cells:
5-6 weeks
Natural killer cells:
varies from weeks to years
T cells – 80-90%
B cells – 10-20%
Natural killer cells – 5- 15%
- Lymphoid Stem cell
- Differentiate into B lymphocyte, T lymphocyte or natural killer cells.
- B lymphocytes further mature into plasma cells in lymph nodes
- T lymphocytes tend to mature in thymus
- B lymphocytes differentiation in foetus occurs in liver but in adults in the bone marrow.
Emergency measures of a haemorrhage
Haemorrhage - Dial 2222
Major Haemorrhage is defined as:
• Blood loss of more than one blood volume within 24 hours
• 50% of total blood volume lost in less than 3 hours
• Bleeding in excess of 150 mL/minute
In acute scenario where the above cannot be measured major haemorrhage can be presumed when bleeding is visible or indicate, and results in:
• BP <90mmHg Systolic
• HR >110bpm
To locate haemorrhage: Mnemonic device On the floor, and four more
“On the floor” refers to visible blood loss from an external wound
“Four more” refers to four more potential spaces within the body, where a large volume of blood can be lost and reside. These are:
• Chest cavity - i.e. Haemothorax
• Abdominal Cavity - Damage to solid organ like the spleen, or damage to a major blood vessel
• Pelvis - classically from a pelvic fracture
• Long Bones - long bone fractures can account for significant blood loss
Investigations to locate bleeding
• CT
• Ultrasound
Stopping the bleeding
• Direct pressure, dressings and or tourniquet for external bleeding
• Pelvic fracture blood loss can be controlled with a pelvic binder
• Pharmacological management with Tranexamic acid and anticoagulation reversal
• Surgery for internal or uncontrollable haemorrhage
Replace lost Blood Volume
• Replace blood with blood, a 1:1 ratio of units of plasma and red blood cells.
• Avoid use of crystalloids for volume replacement in hospital setting
Cannulation
• Establish venous access - use wide bore cannula 14G or 16G and take blood tests for crossmatch or group and save
Blood tests
• FBC
• U&Es
• LFTs
• Coagulation screen
• Group & save (+/- crossmatch)
• Toxicology screen (if you suspect drug overdose)
• Lactate (to assess for evidence of inadequate end-organ perfusion)
Do an ECG to check for heart strain and cardiac tamponade
Coagulation Tests
• Prothrombin Time (PT) -
• Activated Partial Prothrombin Time (APTT)
• Bleeding Time
• Thrombin Time
• FBC
• LFT
• Albumin
• D-Dimer