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Chapter 19, part 2. Blood. Blood types. Determined by the presence or absence of surface antigens (agglutinogens) Antigens A, B and Rh (D) Antibodies in the plasma (agglutinins) Cross-reactions occur when antigens meet antibodies. Figure 19.8 Blood Typing and Cross-Reactions.
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Chapter 19, part 2 Blood
Blood types • Determined by the presence or absence of surface antigens (agglutinogens) • Antigens A, B and Rh (D) • Antibodies in the plasma (agglutinins) • Cross-reactions occur when antigens meet antibodies
Figure 19.8 Blood Typing and Cross-Reactions Figure 19.8
Figure 19.9 Blood Type Testing Figure 19.9
Figure 19.10 Rh Factors and Pregnancy Figure 19.10
Leukocytes • Have nuclei and other organelles • Defend the body against pathogens • Remove toxins, wastes, and abnormal or damaged cells • Are capable of amoeboid movement (margination) and positive chemotaxis • Some are capable of phagocytosis
Types of WBC • Granular leukocytes • Neutrophils – 50 to 70 % total WBC population • Eosinophils – phagocytes attracted to foreign compounds that have reacted with antibodies • Basophils – migrate to damaged tissue and release histamine and heparin
Types of WBC • Agranular leukocytes • Monocytes - become macrophage • Lymphocytes – includes T cells, B cells, and NK cells
Figure 19.11 White Blood Cells Figure 19.11
Differential count • Indicates a number of disorders • Leukemia = inordinate number of leukocytes
WBC Production • Granulocytes and monocytes are produced by bone marrow stem cells • Divide to create progenitor cells • Stem cells may originate in bone marrow and migrate to peripheral tissues • Several colony stimulating factors are involved in regulation and control of production
Figure 19.12 The Origins and Differentiation of Formed Elements Animation: The origins and differentiation of blood cells PLAY Figure 19.12
Platelets • Flattened discs • Circulate for 9-12 days before being removed by phagocytes
Platelet functions • Transporting chemicals important to clotting • Forming temporary patch in walls of damaged blood vessels • Contracting after a clot has formed
Platelet production (thrombocytopoiesis) • Megakaryocytes release platelets into circulating blood • Rate of platelet formation is stimulated by thrombopoietin, thrombocyte-stimulating factor, interleukin-6, and Multi-CSF
Hemostasis • Prevents the loss of blood through vessel walls • Three phases – • Vascular phase • Platelet phase • Coagulation phase
Hemostasis • Vascular phase • Local blood vessel constriction (vascular spasm) • Platelet phase • Platelets are activated, aggregate at the site, adhere to the damaged surfaces
Figure 19.13 The Vascular and Platelet Phases of Hemostasis Figure 19.13
Coagulation phase • Factors released by platelets and endothelial cells interact with clotting factors to form a clot • Extrinsic pathway • Intrinsic pathway • Common pathway • Suspended fibrinogen is converted to large insoluble fibrin fibers
Figure 19.14 The Coagulation Phase of Hemostasis Figure 19.14a
Figure 19.14 The Coagulation Phase of Hemostasis Figure 19.14b
Clot retraction • Final phase of healing • Platelets contract and pull the edges of the vessel together
Fibrinolysis • Clot gradually dissolves through action of plasmin • Activated form of plasminogen • Clotting can be prevented through the use of drugs that depress the clotting response or dissolve existing clots • Anticoagulants include heparin, coumadin, aspirin, dicumarol, t- PA, streptokinase, and urokinase
You should now be familiar with: • The components of the cardiovascular system and its major functions. • The important components and major functions of the blood. • The characteristics and functions of red blood cells. • The structure of hemoglobin and its functions. • Red blood cell production and maturation.
You should now be familiar with: • The importance of blood typing and the basis for ABO and Rh incompatibilities. • The various white blood cells. • The structure, function and production of platelets. • The reaction sequences responsible for blood clotting.