Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDenis Scott Modified over 9 years ago
2
Consists of blood cells & plasma Blood cells = Erythrocytes (RBC’s), Leukocytes (WBC’s), & Thrombocytes (Platelets) Blood is 55% plasma & 45% blood cells Woman has ≈ 5 liters Man has ≈ 6 liters
3
Transport Nutrients, waste, hormones, enzymes, O 2 & CO 2 Regulation of body temp due to high volume of H 2 O in plasma Helps regulate body pH Helps regulate water content of cells/Osmosis Clotting: prevents fluid loss Protection against pathogens (immune response, production of antibodies, destruction of bacteria/viruses, removal of cellular debris & allergic reactions)
4
91% water 7% proteins: 1. Albumin: maintains osmotic pressure & water balance 2. Globulins: antibodies, complements (immune response) & transport molecules 3. Fibrinogens: important role in clotting 2% solutes: Ions, nutrients, waste products, gases, enzymes & hormones
5
95% of blood cell volume; biconcave disks No nucleus, simple structures, don’t divide & live ≈ 120 days Composed of a network of protein called stroma, cytoplasm, lipids (cholesterol) & hemoglobin (red pigment ≈ 33% of cell’s volume)
6
Function: Transport O 2 & CO 2 →→ Hemoglobin allows this Hemoglobin: Globin = protein Heme = pigment containing 4 iron atoms Iron combines with O 2 in the lungs & releases it in tissues; Bright red in color Globin at tissues combines with CO 2 & releases it at lungs; Dark red in color
7
2 subcategories: Granular & Nongranular Have nuclei & no pigment; larger than RBC’s General function in immune response: Combat inflammation & infection Can leave the blood stream & move into tissues via ameboid movement Phagocytosis: “cell eating”
8
1. Neutrophils: 60% - 70% of WBC’s Most active in WBC’s response to tissue destruction by bacteria Stay in blood for 12 hours & then move to tissues where they phagocytize (eat) foreign substances Secrete enzyme Lysozyme that destroys certain bacteria Pus contains dead neutrophils, cell debris & fluids
9
2. Eosinophils: 2% - 4% of WBC’s Combat irritants (pollen, dust, pet dander, etc) that causes allergies Produce antihistamines 3. Basophils: 0.5% - 1% of WBC’s Involved in allergic reactions Releases heparin (anticoagulant), histamine (inflammatory substance) & serotonin (a vasoconstrictor)
10
1. Monocytes: 3% - 8% of WBC’s Phagocytotic: eat bacteria, dead cells &/or cellular debris Largest; after they leave blood & enter tissue, they increase in size & are called Macrophages 2. Lymphocytes: 20% - 25% of WBC’s Production of antibodies & play important role in immune response Smallest; several types: B & T lymphocytes Control cancer cells, destroy microorganisms & reject foreign tissues
11
Disk-shaped cellular fragments with a nucleus Prevent fluid loss when blood vessels are damaged
12
When larger blood vessels are damaged, clotting mechanism takes over Cut vessel is rough & irregular shaped 3 stages to clotting/coagulation 1. Rough surface of vessel causes platelets to clump together at the site of the injury Tissue releases thromboplastin which produces prothrombin activator Requires Ca 2+, certain proteins & phospholipids
13
2. Ca 2+ & prothrombin activator converts prothrombin into thrombin 3. Soluble fibrinogen is converted into insoluble fibrin Thrombin catalyzes the reaction Fibrin forms long threads that act like a net = CLOT Clot forms & traps blood cells & platelets in the fibrin threads & bleeding stops
14
Syneresis: clot retraction; tightening of clot so wound gets smaller & smaller Serum (blood plasma minus clotting factors) surrounds wound under clot & hemorrhage is stopped Blood vessel repairs itself Fibronolysis occurs: blood clot dissolves
15
Build up of cholesterol mass (Plaque) on smooth walls of UNDAMAGED blood vessels can cause clot formation Called Thrombosis & clot is called a Thrombus Thrombus may dissolve or a piece can dislodge & get transported in blood = Embolus Embolus can get stuck in a vessel & cut-off circulation = Embolism If tissues are killed = Infarction
16
Agglutination: clumping of RBC’s, A.K.A transfusion reaction Caused by reaction between antibodies in plasma & surface antigens on RBC’s Caused by mismatched blood types Headache, difficulty breathing, face flushed, pain in neck, chest & lower back, jaundice & kidney failure
17
Presence or absence of antigens on RBC surface: antigen A & antigen B Inherited; 4 possible antigen combinations: A only: Type A B only: Type B A & B : Type AB Neither A nor B: Type O Antibodies are formed during infancy against the ABO antigens NOT present on our own RBC’s Type A: antibody anti-B Type B: antibody anti-A Type AB: neither antibody → Type O: both anti-A & anti-B Universal Recipient Universal Donor
19
Inherited; named after Rhesus monkey where antigen 1 st discovered If antigen D is found on RBC, the blood is Rh positive If the RBC lacks the antigen, blood is Rh negative Anti-Rh antibodies only develop after initial exposure to Rh-positive blood Rh-negative person receives transfusion from Rh-positive person = no reaction (1 st time) but anti-Rh antibodies form If 2 nd exposure happens, agglutination occurs
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.