A&P2 exam 1 chapter 17 hw
What is a hematocrit?
A hematocrit is the percentage of erythrocytes in a whole blood sample.
Mr. Watkins's blood type was determined to be A positive. Which of the following types of blood can he receive?
A positive, A negative, O positive, and O negative.
Which of these cells are considered granular?
A, B, and C
Leukopenia
Abnormally low white blood cell count
A person who lacks agglutinogen A but has agglutinogen B would have blood type __________.
B
Which of the following scenarios could result in HDN (hemolytic disease of the newborn)?
B-negative female pregnant with an AB-positive baby
A patient has a suspected electrolyte imbalance, what blood test would reveal an electrolyte imbalance?
Comprehensive Medical Panel (CMP)
During which event of hemostasis do clotting factors (procoagulants) assist with the transformation of blood from a liquid to a gel?
D
Which image shows the type of leukocyte responsible for antibody production?
D
Choose the incompatible transfusion.
Donate type B blood to a recipient with type O blood.
What type of connective tissue cells are similar to basophils in that they contain granules that release histamine to mediate the inflammatory response?
Mast cells
Blood is a type of connective tissue. What primary germ layer is responsible for producing both blood cells and phagocytic brain glial cells?
Mesoderm
Which of these is true of the materials making up the buffy coat in centrifuged blood?
They are intermediate in density between erythrocytes and plasma
Which of the following best explains how platelets enter the blood?
They are passed through the wall of a bone marrow capillary.
Which part of the hemoglobin molecule binds carbon dioxide for transport?
amino acids of the globin
During erythroblastosis fetalis, a Rh− mother's anti-Rh antibodies that have crossed the placenta will cause agglutination of the fetus's Rh+ RBCs. However, the reverse problem never happens when a Rh+ mother is pregnant with a Rh− fetus; that is, antibodies produced by the fetus cannot cause agglutination of the mother's Rh+ RBCs. This is true because ______.
antibodies that can cause this agglutination are not produced by a fetus
hemo
blood
Which of these is most likely in the event of excessive consumption of erythrocytes by macrophages?
blood levels of bilirubin would rise
Erythropoietin (EPO) stimulates the developmental process shown here. What part of the body does erythropoietin (EPO) target to increase erythropoiesis?
bone marrow
myelo
bone marrow
thromb
clot
embal
embolus or wedge
What part of the pathway to produce platelets is shared with other formed elements?
hematopoietic stem cell (hemocytoblast)
Which of the following is not a function of blood?
hormone production
myeloblast
immature bone marrow that gives rise to granulocytes
From which cell do the granulocytes descend?
myeloblast
In a cancer patient undergoing chemotherapy, the decision to utilize a CSF capable of specifically stimulating the production of only the granular leukocytes would require that the CSF acts exclusively on ______.
myeloblasts
Which cells of the myeloid stem cell pathway have accumulated granules?
myelocytes
Identify the leukocytes in the figure in order.
neutrophil, eosinophil, basophil, lymphocyte, monocyte
Which of the following is NOT regulated by blood?
nutrient levels
What erythrocyte production disorder results from an autoimmune disease associated with insufficient vitamin B12 absorption (step 6)?
pernicious anemia
During which phase in erythrocyte development does the color of hemoglobin overcome the color of the stained ribosomes?
phase 2
Which of these makes up the greatest portion of whole blood by volume?
plasma
Which of these develops from lymphoid stem cells?
plasma cells
What enzyme removes unneeded clots after healing has occurred?
plasmin
Which formed element can be described as cytoplasmic fragments?
platelets
What is the complete hemoglobin molecule composed of?
polypeptide chains (globins), heme groups, and iron ions
Erythropoiesis
production of red blood cells
erythro
red
What triggers erythropoietin (EPO) release that leads to the production of new red blood cells?
reduced availability of oxygen
What is a young, anucleate erythrocyte called?
reticulocyte
Thrombopoietin
stimulates production of platelets
Hemostasis
stoppage of bleeding
embolism
the sudden blockage of a blood vessel by an embolus
Mrs. Ryan, a middle-aged woman, appears at the clinic complaining of multiple small hemorrhagic spots in her skin and severe nosebleeds. While taking her history, the nurse notes that Mrs. Ryan works as a rubber glue applicator at a local factory. Rubber glue contains benzene, which is known to be toxic to red bone marrow. Which bleeding disorder is likely to result from the toxic effects of benzene?
thrombocytopenia
leuko
white