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Anatomy Chapter 12
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A. erythrocytes- erythro- redcyte- cell ferry oxygen to all cells in body anucleated cells contain hemoglobin- iron containing protein which transports O2 biconcave disks- creates large surface area for carrying oxygen
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make up 45% of total bld- hematocrit normally 5 million cells/mm 3 each rbc contains 250 million hemoglobin molecules capable of binding 4 molecules of O 2 normal bld contains 12-18g/100mL
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anemia- decrease in O 2 - carrying ability resulting from lower # of rbs abnormal/ defi - cient hemoglobin content
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sickle-cell anemia- genetic disorder occurs most often in blacks
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1. State the main fxn of leukocytes. 2. Discuss the # of different types of wbc, name them, and list the 4 ways they are distinguished. 3. How many wbc are in a normal adult’s blood? 4. Name 2 ways in which wbc protect against infection. 5. Give examples of how doctors can use the wbc counts to indicate types of infections.
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6. Distinguish among the leukocytes that are granular and those that are agranular. (name them) 7. What is the difference between agranulocytes and granulocytes? 8. Discuss a unique property of leukocytes that enables them to get to a point of infection in the body. 9. Many leukocytes are phagocytes. What does this mean?
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B. leukocytes- white blood cells leukos- white crucial to body’s defense against disease 4 000 to 11 000 wbc/mm 3 make up 1% total bld volume form a “movable army” against invaders
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able to slip in & out of bld vessels- diapedesis use circulatory system as means of transportation to respond to inflammatory or immune responses
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move by ameboid motion thru tissue until get to damaged or infected area have infection, wbc counts go up if 11 000 cells/mm3 have leukocytosis mononucleosis & leukemia- high # wbc
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1. granulocytes - contain visible granules in cytoplasm have lobed nuclei develop from red bone marrow
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a. neutrophils- most active leukocytes most numerous- 3 000 to 7 000 phagocytotic- ingest bacteria and dead matter; die soon after release bacteria destroying subst 2 – 5 lobed nucleus pale purple staining incr during bacterial infection & acute infections
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b. eosinsophils- 100-400 figure 8 nucleus or bilobed deep red granules in cytoplasm; blue red nucleus weakly phagocytic numbers incr during allergy attacks kills parasites (worms)
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c. basophils- 20-50/mm3 deep blue granules; u or s shaped nucleus discharge histamines (which incr bld flow to site of inflammation) secrete heparin to prevent clotting of bld
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2. agranulocytes- lack visible granules nuclei spherical, oval, or kidney shaped Some differentiate in lymphatic organs after red bone marrow
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d. b-lymphocytes- produce antibodies 1500-3000 (combined) pale blue cytoplasm; dark purple nucleus #s will drop significantly due to AIDS
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e. t-lymphocytes- slightly larger than rbc large round nucleus w/ thin rim of cytoplasm important in immunity graft rejection and fighting tumors and viruses may live for years 2 nd most numerous group of wbc (combined) when #s incr could indicate mono or chronic infection
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f. monocytes- phagocytic wbc 100-500 largest blood cell; capable of digesting large cells clean up cells after infection gray-blue cytoplasm; dark blue-purple staining nucleus contains many lysosomes
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# increase during chronic infections if # incr dramatically could indicate malaria, endocarditis, typhoid fever, Rocky Mtn spotted fever
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250 000 to 500 000/mm 3 irregularly shaped cell fragments circulate about 10 days capable of ameboid motion no nucleus; cytoplasm stains dark purple
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imp role in bld clotting help to close breaks in damaged bld vessels and to initiate formation of bld clots hematostasis
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liquid part of blood 92% water 55 % of whole blood straw-colored, salty taste, sticky contains plasma proteins made by liver; contributes to osmotic pressure of bld
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helps regulate fluid and electrolyte balance maintain favorable blood pH helps distribute body heat
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aka blood cell formation occurs in red bone marrow of flat bones all formed elements of bld arise from hemocytoblast (stem cell) hemocytoblast forms 2 types of cells which will then differentiate into the different formed elements thru series of steps
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takes about 5-7 days to make a mature rbc rbc production controlled by a certain hormone released by kidney
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stoppage of bld flow have damaged bld vessel 3 phases that will occur: 1. vascular spasms 2. platelet plug formation 3. blood clot formation
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platelets begin to cling to damaged parts serotonin is released causing bld vessels to go into spasms which narrows vessels platelets release thromboplastin which triggers clotting
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bld clot formation- aka coagulation thromboplastin is converted to thrombin, which joins fibrinogen which makes a net to trap rbc (very sticky) usu occurs in 2-6 minutes
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1. undesirable clotting- thrombus- clot develops in leg (usu) and persists embolus- when thrombus flows thru vessels if lodged, can kill
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2. hemophilia- hereditary bleeding disorder that results from the lack of protein factors that lead to clotting aka “free-bleeders”
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minor tissue trauma can lead to prolonged bleeding and even death thrombocytopenia- insufficient # of platelets
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cancer of the white blood cells too many wbc are being produced, not enough rbc and platelets fatigue, frequent illness, anemia, slow clotting (bruising), painfully weak bones treatments: bone marrow transplants, stem cell transplants, meds
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4 blood types: A, B, O, AB all body cells produce “markers” on the cell membranes that identify them as unique & you these are antigens for cells that aren’t yours, your body recognizes the antigens as FOREIGN
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antigens of foreign cells stimulate immune system to release antibodies to fight against them we all have “recognizer antibodies” in our bld stream that recognizes foreign antigens
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these antibodies will bind onto the foreign substance (rbc, for ex) causing agglutination or clumping mismatched blood may cause death
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symptoms: anxiety, breathing difficulty, flushing, headache, severe pain in neck, chest, lumbar region, rbc burst- leading to jaundice, kidney failure
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Rh factor- discovered on rhesus monkeys 1 st most Americans are Rh+ Have Rh antigen on rbc Rh- do not have antigen on rbc
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Blood typing sheet
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