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1.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-1 The Blood
2.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-2 Cells of the body are serviced by 3 closely related fluids
Blood
composed of plasma and a variety of cells
transports nutrients, gases and wastes
Tissue fluid
bathes the cells of the body
Lymph
Tissue fluid that does not first return directly to blood vessels but instead passes thru lymph nodes and then back to blood
Nutrients and oxygen diffuse from the blood into the tissue fluid & then into a cell’s cytoplasm
Wastes and carbon dioxide move in the reverse direction Fluids of the Body
3.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-3 Lymphatic System
4.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-4 Functions of Blood Transportation
O2, C O2, metabolic wastes, nutrients, heat & hormones
Regulation
helps regulate pH through buffers
helps regulate body temperature
When sweat (comes from blood) evaporates takes large amount of heat away
helps regulate water content of body cells Protection from disease & loss of blood
5.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-5 Physical Characteristics of Blood Thicker (more viscous) than water, flows more slowly than water
Temperature of 100.4 degrees F / 38 degrees C
pH 7.4 (7.35-7.45)
8 % of total body weight
Blood volume
5 to 6 liters in average male
4 to 5 liters in average female
6.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-6 Techniques of Blood Sampling Venipuncture
sample taken from vein with hypodermic needle & syringe
Usually just inside of elbow
Why stick an vein?
less pressure
closer to the surface
Finger or heel stick
common technique for diabetics to monitor daily blood sugar
method used for infants
7.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-7 Components of Blood Hematocrit
55% plasma
45% cells
99% RBCs
< 1% WBCs and platelets
8.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-8 Blood Plasma 0ver 90% water
7% plasma proteins
created in liver
(antibodies/immunoglobulins)
antibodies bind to foreignsubstances called antigens
form antigen-antibody combination
fibrinogen
for clotting
2% other substances
electrolytes, nutrients, hormones, gases, waste products
9.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-9
10.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-10
11.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-11 Formed Elements of Blood Red blood cells ( erythrocytes )
White blood cells ( leukocytes )
Platelets (special cell fragments)
12.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-12 Number of RBC Anemia
not enough RBCs or not enough hemoglobin
Polycythemia
too many RBCs (over 65%)
dehydration, tissue hypoxia, blood doping in athletes
13.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-13 Blood Doping EPO
Injecting previously stored RBC’s before an athletic event
more cells available to deliver oxygen to tissues
Dangerous
increases blood viscosity
forces heart to work harder
Banned by Olympic and all sporting assoications
14.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-14 Formation of Blood Cells Most blood cells types need to be continually replaced
WBC die within hours, days or weeks, RBC destroyed after 3-4 months
In adult
occurs only in red marrow of flat bones like sternum, ribs, skull, vertebra, pelvis and upper portion of femur and humerus
15.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-15 Contain oxygen-carrying protein hemoglobin that gives blood its red color
1/3 of cell’s weight is hemoglobin
(250 million Hb/cell!!)
increased surface area/volume ratio
flexible shape for narrow passages
no nucleus or other organelles
no cell division or mitochondrial ATP formation
Normal RBC count
male 5.4 million/drop ---- female 4.8 million/drop
new RBCs enter/leave circulation at 2 million
cells/second Red Blood Cells or Erythrocytes
16.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-16 Hemoglobin Globin protein consisting of 4 polypeptide chains
One heme pigment attached to each polypeptide chain
each heme contains an iron ion (Fe2+) that can combine reversibly with one oxygen molecule
17.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-17 Transport of O2 and CO2 Each hemoglobin molecule can carry 4 oxygen(O2) molecules from lungs to tissue cells
Hemoglobin transports 23% of total CO2 waste from tissue cells to lungs for release
combines with amino acids in globin portion of Hb
18.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-18 RBC Life Cycle RBCs live only 120 days
wear out from bending to fit through capillaries
no repair possible due to lack of organelles
Worn out cells removed in spleen and liver by permanently attached WBCs
RBC breakdown products are recycled
Blood cells are replaced w/in 5-7 days after donation -but temp. uses up Fe3+ stored supplies
Blood bank makes you wait 8 weeks
19.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-19
20.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-20 WBC Anatomy and Types All WBCs (leukocytes) have a nucleus and no hemoglobin
Granular or Agranular
21.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-21 WBC
Only 2% of total WBC population is in circulating blood at any given time
rest is in lymphatic fluid, lymph nodes, skin, lungs& spleen
22.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-22 WBCs can leave blood vessels WBCs roll along & squeeze between cells.
Some can engulf/phagocytize bacteria & debris
Attracted to chemicals released at injury/infection
23.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-23 Bone Marrow Transplant Intravenous transfer of healthy bone marrow
Procedure
destroy sick bone marrow with radiation & chemotherapy
donor matches surface antigens on WBC
put sample of donor marrow into patient's vein for reseeding of bone marrow
success depends on histocompatibility of donor & recipient
Treatment for leukemia, sickle-cell, breast, ovarian, testicular cancer, lymphoma or aplastic anemia
24.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-24 Platelets A cubic milliliter contains ~ 250,000 platelets.
Thrombocytes are small, nucleated cells that are involved in clotting of blood. A cubic milliliter contains ~ 250,000 platelets.
Thrombocytes are small, nucleated cells that are involved in clotting of blood.
25.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-25 Platelets Disc-shaped, cell fragment with no nucleus
Normal platelet count is 150,000-400,000/drop of blood
Other blood cell counts
5 million red & 5-10,000 white blood cells
26.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-26 Stopping Bleeding vascular spasm
platelet plug formation
blood clotting
formation of fibrin threads
27.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-27 Blood Clotting
28.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-28 Overview of the Clotting Cascade Prothrombinase is formed by either the intrinsic or extrinsic pathway
Final common pathway produces fibrin threads
29.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-29
30.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-30 Anticoagulants and Thrombolytic Agents Anticoagulants suppress or prevent blood clotting
heparin
administered during kidney dialysis and surgery
warfarin (Coumadin)
antagonist to vitamin K so blocks synthesis of clotting factors
slower than heparin
Thrombolytic agents are injected to dissolve clots
Aka “Clot Busters”
directly or indirectly activate plasminogen
streptokinase or tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA)
31.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-31 Blood Groups and Blood Types RBC surfaces are marked by genetically determined markers (glycoproteins & glycolipids)
agglutinogens or isoantigens
distinguishes at least 24 different blood groups
ABO, Rh, Lewis, Kell, Kidd and Duffy systems
32.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-32 ABO Blood Groups Based on 2 markers called A and B found on the cell membrane of RBCs
display only antigen A -- blood type A
display only antigen B -- blood type B
display both antigens A & B -- blood type AB
display neither antigen -- blood type O
Plasma contains isoantibodies or agglutinins to the A or B antigens not found in your blood
anti-A antibody reacts with antigen A
anti-B antibody reacts with antigen B
33.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-33 Rh blood groups Antigen was discovered in blood of Rhesus monkey
People with Rh markers on RBC surface are Rh+. Normal plasma contains no anti-Rh antibodies
Antibodies develop only in Rh- blood type & only with exposure to the antigen
transfusion of positive blood
during a pregnancy with a positive blood type fetus
Transfusion reaction upon 2nd exposure to the antigen results in destruction of the RBCs in the donated blood
34.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-34 Transfusion and Transfusion Reactions Transfer of whole blood, cells or plasma into the bloodstream of recipient
used to treat anemia or severe blood loss
Incompatible blood transfusions
antigen-antibody complexes form between plasma antibodies & “foreign proteins” on donated RBC's (agglutination)
donated RBCs become leaky (complement proteins) & burst
loose hemoglobin causes kidney damage
Problems caused by incompatibility between donor’s cells and recipient’s plasma
Donor plasma is too diluted to cause problems
35.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-35 Universal Donors and Recipients People with type AB blood called “universal recipients” since have no antibodies in plasma
only true if cross match the blood for other antigens
People with type O blood cell called “universal donors” since have no antigens on their cells, still have A & B agglutinins
theoretically can be given to anyone
36.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-36
37.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-37
38.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-38
39.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-39 Umbilical Cord Contents
2 arteries that carry blood to the placenta
1 umbilical vein that carries oxygenated blood to the fetus
primitive connective tissue
Stub drops off in 2 weeks leaving a scar called the umbilicus
40.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-40
41.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-41 Hemolytic Disease of Newborn (erythroblastois fetalis) Rh negative mom and Rh+ fetus will have mixing of blood at birth. Anti-Rh antibodies are 5x smaller than the A, B antibodies. These small antibodies will cross the placental barrier
Mom's body creates Rh antibodies unless she receives a RhoGam shot at 28 weeks (greatest risk of maternal-fetal exchange) and w/in 72 hours after delivery, miscarriage or abortion.
RhoGam binds to loose fetal blood and removes it from body before her immune system reacts
In 2nd + child, if mom had no RhoGam, hemolytic disease of the newborn may develop causing hemolysis of the fetal RBCs
42.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-42 Anemia = Not Enough RBCs Symptoms
oxygen-carrying capacity of blood is reduced
fatigue, cold intolerance & paleness
lack of O2 for ATP & heat production
43.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-43 Sickle-cell Anemia (SCA) Genetic defect in hemoglobin molecule (Hb-S) that changes 2 amino acids
at low very O2 levels, RBC is deformed by changes in hemoglobin molecule within the RBC
sickle-shaped cells rupture easily = causing anemia & clots
Found among populations in malaria belt
Mediterranean Europe, sub-Saharan Africa & Asia
Person with only one sickle cell gene
increased resistance to malaria because RBC membranes leak K+ & lowered levels of K+ kill the parasite infecting the red blood cells
44.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-44 Hemophilia Inherited deficiency of clotting factors
bleeding spontaneously or after minor trauma
Under the skin & inside of the muscles bleeding
nosebleeds, blood in urine, inside of the joints (very painful)
Hemophilia A lacks factor VIII (primarily males)
most common
Hemophilia B lacks factor IX (primarily males)
Hemophilia C (males & females)
less severe because alternate clotting activator exists
Treatment is transfusions of fresh plasma or concentrates of the missing clotting factor
45.
Tortora & Grabowski 9/e ?2000 JWS 19-45 Leukemia- cancer of WBC Acute leukemia
crowding out of normal red bone marrow cells by uncontrolled production of immature WBC
prevents production of RBC & platelets
Chronic leukemia
accumulation of mature WBC in bloodstream because they do not die