Lab #1: Blood
Circulatory System
(aka cardiovascular system) This system works as the transportation highway for the body. It consists of the heart, blood, and blood vessels. It transports substances such as oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nutrients in the body.
Sickle Cell Disease
-Hereditary hemoglobin defects (recessive allele) -Most common in African and Mediterranean descent
Leukocytes or White Blood Cells (WBCs)
-Least abundant formed elements -Few hours in the bloodstream and pass to the tissues -Leukocytes have organelles for protein synthesis to function Types of WBCs: Agranulocytes: 1. Monocytes 2. Lymphocytes Granulocytes: 1. Eosinophils (eosin) 2. Basophils (methylene blue) 3. Neutrophils
Which of the following blood components provide the major defense for our bodies against invading viruses? 1.7 pts
-Neutrophils -Eosinophils -Basophils -Monocytes None of these
How to test to know ABO Blood Groups and Rh Typing
1. Place 3 drops of blood to be tested 2. First drop mixed with Anti-A Monoclonal antibody reagent in blue color 3. Second/middle drop mixed with yellow colored Anti-B reagent 4. Third blood drop with Anti-D or Rh Antibody 5. Mix each drop thoroughly 6. Note any agglutination or clumping
Which white blood count may indicate an infection in the body?
30,000/mm3
Which one of the following situations would be beneficial for the recipient?
A Type A person receives a transfusion from a Type O person
Type A blood can receive donations from
A and O
Universal Recipient Blood Type
AB+
Correctly identify the blood pathologies described in the left column by matching them with selections from the right column:
Abnormal increase in the number of WBCs- leukocytosis Abnormal increase in the number of RBCs- Polycythemia Condition of too few RBCs or of RBCs with hemoglobin deficiencies- Anemia Abnormal decrease in the number of WBCs- Leukopenia
Blood Characteristics
Adults: 4-6 liters Matrix = plasma Formed elements: Erythrocytes (RBCs), Platelets, and Leukocytes (WBCs) Red blood cells are 37-52% of the total volume
Monocytes
Agranulocyte Largest WBC, 2-3x the size of a RBC 3-8% of WBCs Nucleus: large, kidney shape Monocyte count rises in inflammation and viral infections Monocytes -> Macrophages in the tissues
Lymphocytes
Agranulocytes 2nd most abundant, 25-33% of WBCs Nucleus: round, ovoid and slightly dimpled in one side Stains: dark violent/uniform Small (blood), medium and large (connective tissue) Secrete antibodies, and immune memory
Blood Proteins
Albumim- Smallest and most abundant plasma protein, transports solutes and buffer the pH of plasma, viscosity and osmolarity of the blood. Globulin- Alpha, Beta, and Gamma, plays a role in transport, clotting and immunity. Fibrinogen- Precursor of fibrin, a sticky protein that forms the framework of a blood clot All produced by the liver: 4g per hour Gamma globulins aren't made by liver
Erythrocyte Life Cycle
Average of 120 days Erythropoiesis -> erythrocyte production (takes 3-5 days)
The ABO Group
Blood Types: A, B, AB, and O -> ABO group Determined by presence/absence of A and B antigens in the RBCs Specific Antigens found in blood types All Blood Types: ends with galactose and fucose Type A: N-acetylgalactosamine Type B: galactose Type AB: has both, N-acetylgalactosamine and galactose Antibodies- appear 2-8 months after birth, reach max concentrations at 8-10 years Anti-A: alpha agglutinin- present in Type O/B blood Anti-B: beta agglutinin- present in Type O/A blood
What happens in agglutination? Why can it be fatal?
Blood cells clump together and are therefore unable to circulate properly in the circulatory system
Blood Types
Blood types are a matter of interactions between plasma proteins and erythrocytes and are based on larger Antigen and Antibodies molecules. Karl Landsteiner discover blood types in 1900
Leukemia
Cancer of Hematopoietic tissues that produces too much WBCs (immature cells) Classification: Acute or Chronic Myeloid Leukemia- Uncontrolled granulocyte production (Basophils, Eosinophils, Neutrophils) Lymphoid Leukemia- Uncontrolled Lymphocyte or Monocyte production
Mature ___________ are the most numerous blood cells and do not have a nucleus.
Erythrocytes
A person with blood type AB is considered to be a universal donor
False
Lymphocytes question
Formed Elements
Erythrocytes (Red Blood Cells)
Functions: 1. Pick up O2 from lungs and deliver it to the tissues 2. Pick up CO2 from tissues and unload in the lungs Most abundant formed elements of the blood, no nucleus, rely on anaerobic fermentation to produce ATP
Basophils
Granulocyte: Dark violent granules Less than 0.5% Nucleus: S or U shaped Secrete: 1. Histamine (vasodilation) 2. Heparin (anticoagulant) 3. Chemical signals that attract Eosinophils and Neutrophils to the area
Eosinophils
Granulocyte: abundant red to orange granules Only 2-4% of the WBC total Abundant in Mucous membranes Nucleus: 2 large lobes Eosinophilia: in allergies, parasitic infections, collagen diseases and diseases of the spleen and central nervous system
Neutrophils
Granulocyte: reddish cytoplasm Most abundant -> 60-70% of WBCs Nucleus: 3-5 lobes Band Cells: immature neutrophils Function: response to bacterial infection
Production of Blood
Hematopoiesis- blood production Hemopoietic tissues- tissues that produce blood cells
The protein found in blood that is responsible for transporting oxygen is
Hemoglobin
The substance that stimulates the formation of white blood cells is
Leukopoetin
The proteins of the blood are formed by the
Liver
Produces antibodies
Lymphocyte
Which is not a granulocyte?
Lymphocyte
Blood Plasma
Mix of: water, proteins, nutrients, electrolytes, nitrogenous wastes, hormones and gases. Serum = Plasma - Fibrinogen Protein is the most abundant plasma solute (6-9 g/dL) Plasma Proteins: Clotting, Defense, and Transport
The least numerous but largest of all agranulocytes is the:
Monocyte
The least numerous but largest of all agranulocytes it the:
Monocyte
Which of the following are likely to increase in quantities when the body is under attack from bacteria
Neutrophils
Substances that enable the body to distinguish its own cells from foreign matter in the blood are called
None of these
Leukocyte Disorders
Normal Leukocyte Value: 5,000-10,000 WBCs/uL Leukopenia- below 5,000 WBCs/uL Causes: AIDS, chickenpox, influenza Leukocytosis- above 10,000 WBCs/uL Causes: infection, allergy, dehydration, emotional disturbances
Universal Donor Blood Type
O-
Blood Type Test
Place a drop of blood in Anti-A serum and another drop in Anti-B serum: Type A: will agglutinate only on Anti-A serum Type B: will agglutinate only on Anti-B serum Type AB: will agglutinate in both Type O: will not agglutinate in either Type is most common, Type AB is the rarest
Most of the volume of normal human blood is composed of:
Plasma
Erythrocytes
Plasma Membrane -> Glycolipids -> determine blood type
Three types of formed elements found in blood include erythrocytes, leukocytes, and:
Platelets
Erythrocyte Disorders
Polycythemia- excess RBCs, Primary Polycythemia (Cancer of the erythropoietic line of red bone marrow), Secondary Polycythemia (dehydration, state of hypoxemia) Risks- Increased BP, BP, and Viscosity -> embolism, stroke or heart failure Anemia- lack of RBCs, inadequate erythropoiesis or hemoglobin synthesis, hemorrhagic anemia from bleeding, hemolytic anemia from RBCs destruction
If blood contains over 55% RBCs, the individual is said to be
Polycythemic
The Rh Group
Rh antigens were discovered in 1940, from the rhesus monkey Antigen D= most reactive Rh(+)= if they have Antigen D Rh(-)= if they don't have it
Electrolytes
Sodium = 90% of the plasma cations (+) Increase in salt intake -> Increase in Plasma -> Increase in H2O -> increase in blood pressure
Nitrogen Wastes
Toxic end products of metabolism
Blood Function
Transport: O2 from lungs to the tissues, CO2 from tissues to the lungs, Metabolic wastes from tissues to kidneys for removal, hormones from endocrine cells to target organs. Protection: Big role in inflammation, WBC destroy microorganisms and cancer cells, antibodies neutralizes toxins and destroys pathogens, platelets secrete factors that initiate blood clotting. Regulation: stabilizes fluid distribution in the body, stabilize pH of extracellular fluid, shifts in blood flow to control temp.
Agglutination is a form of blood clotting in the body.
True
An individual who has no antigens attached to the membrane of their RBC are referred to as blood type O
True
If an individual is transfused with the wrong blood type, the recipient's antibodies react with the donor's blood antigens, eventually clumping and hemolyzing the donated RBCs
True
Which blood type lacks antigens?
Type O
What is an antibody?
a large, Y-shaped protein produced mainly by plasma cells that is used by the immune system to neutralize pathogens such as pathogenic bacteria and viruses
What is an antigen?
a toxin or other foreign substance which induces an immune response in the body
Blood typing is based on the presence of proteins known as _____________ on the outer surface of the red blood cell plasma membrane.
antigens
involved in destroying parasitic worms
eosinophil
Cardiovascular System
heart and blood vessels
Reticulocyte
immature erythrocyte disintegrate the polyribosome in 1-2 days
Precursor cell of platelets
megakaryocyte
Most numerous leukocyte
neutrophil
What are the 3 granulocytes?
neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils
What are the 3 phagocytes?
neutrophils, monocytes, eosinophils
erythrocyte; anucleate formed element
red blood cell
Hematology
study of blood
Blood viscosity
thickness of blood Whole Blood- 5x viscous as H2O -> RBCs Plasma- 2x viscous as H2O -> Protein Viscosity: governs blood flow