Lab Exercise 26 Blood Components and Blood Tests
Formed elements constitute what percentage of blood volume?
45%
Plasma composes what percentage of blood volume?
55%
Antigen
A substance or part of a substance (living or nonliving) that is recognized as foreign by the immune system, activates the immune system, and reacts with immune cells or their products.
Most commonly used blood typing systems
ABO and Rh systems
Leukopenia
Abnormally low white blood cell count
Serum
Amber-colored fluid that exudes from clotted blood as the clot shrinks; plasma without clotting factors.
Polycythemia
An abnormally high number of erythrocytes (RBC's)
Leukocytosis
An increase in the number of leukocytes (White Blood Cells); usually the result of a microbiological attack on the body.
A hematocrit with RBC's below the normal level indicates a type of
Anemia
White blood cell whose granules stain purplish-black and nucleus purple with basic dye
Basophil; large blue-purple droplets, nucleus is obscured by granules
Agranular leukocytes have granules but they
Cannot be observed with the light microscope
What does blood transport away from body tissues?
Carbon dioxide, heat, and metabolic wastes
Platelets
Cell fragment found in blood; involved in clotting.
Formed Elements
Cellular portion of blood which include red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.
Granular leukocytes have
Discernible vesicles or granules in the cytoplasm that can be seen after staining.
Granular white blood cell whose granules readily take up the red stain called eosin
Eosinophil; small red granules, bi-lobed nucleus
Red Blood Cells are also called
Erythrocytes
There are approximately how many white blood cells per microliter of blood?
Five thousand to ten thousand
There are approximately how many red blood cells per microliter of blood?
Four and a half to five million
Two main categories of White Blood Cells (leukocytes)
Granular leukocytes and Agranular leukocytes
Determines the percentage of total blood volume occupied by erythrocytes. Described as a percentage of RBC's in a whole blood sample
Hematocrit
Hematocrit Red Blood Cell % Formula
Length of RBC's in millimeters, divided by length of the whole column in millimeters, multiplied by 100.
White Blood Cells are also called
Leukocytes
Second most numerous white blood cell that arises from bone marrow and becomes functionally mature in the lymphoid organs of the body.
Lymphocyte; smallest white blood cell, very large nucleus
Agranular leukocytes include
Lymphocytes and monocytes
Platelets are formed in red bone marrow from large, multinuclear cells called
Megakaryocytes
Largest white blood cell
Monocyte; horseshoe shaped nucleus, light blue cytoplasm
Most numerous white blood cell
Neutrophil; multi-lobed nucleus, neutral to pink granules
What does blood transport to body tissues?
Oxygen, nutrients, and hormones
Blood is dark red when?
Oxygen-poor
Blood is bright red when?
Oxygen-rich
Hemoglobin
Oxygen-transporting protein of erythrocytes.
When centrifuged, blood in a heparinized tube separates visually into two main components:
Plasma and formed elements
An abnormally high hematocrit (65% or above) is indicative of
Polycythemia
Coagulation
Process in which blood is transformed from a liquid to a gel; blood clotting.
Blood provides
Protection from blood loss through clotting and against disease through phagocytic white blood cells and antibodies
Anemia
Reduced oxygen-carrying ability of blood resulting from too few erythrocytes (RBC's) or abnormal hemoglobin.
Rh system
Rh blood group system, system for classifying blood groups according to the presence or absence of the Rh antigen, often called the Rh factor, on the cell membranes of the red blood cells (erythrocytes). The designation Rh is derived from the use of the blood of rhesus monkeys in the basic test for determining the presence of the Rh antigen in human blood.
Blood typing is based on
Th Antigenic molecules that are on the surface of the RBC membranes
ABO system
The classification of human blood based on the inherited properties of red blood cells (erythrocytes) as determined by the presence or absence of the antigens A and B, which are carried on the surface of the red cells. Persons may thus have type A, type B, type O, or type AB blood.
Plasma
The nonliving fluid component of blood within which formed elements and various solutes are suspended and circulated.
Platelets are also called
Thrombocytes
A deficiency in the number of circulating platelets is called
Thrombocytopenia
Universal Blood Recipient Type
Type AB
Universal Blood Donor Type
Type O
The cardiovascular system contains approximately how much blood?
five and a half liters or one and a half gallons
Granular leukocytes include
neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils
Platelets do not have
nuclei and are not considered to be cells
What does blood regulate in the body?
pH, body temperature, and cell water content
Antibodies
plasma proteins that combine with a specific antigen to inhibit or destroy it
Complete Blood Count (CBC) tests include
total RBC count, total WBC count, platelet count, differential WBC count, hematocrit, and hemoglobin concentration.
Complete Blood Count (CBC)
a vital diagnostic tool that screens for abnormalities in the number or structure of formed elements. It is used along with a battery of blood chemistry tests to put together a comprehensive profile of a person's general level of health based on blood values
