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Blood and Lymph. Key Concepts What are the components of blood What determines the type of blood that a person can receive in transfusion? What are the structures and functions of the lymphatic system?. Plasma Red blood cell Hemoglobin White blood cell. Platelet Lymphatic system Lymph
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Blood and Lymph Key Concepts • What are the components of blood • What determines the type of blood that a person can receive in transfusion? • What are the structures and functions of the lymphatic system?
Plasma Red blood cell Hemoglobin White blood cell Platelet Lymphatic system Lymph Lymph nodes Key Terms
Blood Blood is a complex tissue that is made of plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets • 45% of blood is cells; 55% is plasma
Plasma Plasma • 90% water • Remaining 10% is made up of dissolved glucose, fats, vitamins and minerals. • Also carries chemical messengers, carries away wastes • Protein molecules give plasma its yellow color. – Three groups of Plasma proteins • 1st group - helps regulate amount of water entering and leaving the blood • 2nd group- produced by white blood cells helps to fight disease • 3rd group - interacts with platelets to form blood clots.
Red blood cells (rbc) • Take up O2 in lungs and delivers it to cells • Produced in bone marrow • Made up mostly of hemoglobin – an iron containing protein that binds to O2 • rbc’s with O2 are bright red, rbc’s without O2 are dark red • Mature red blood cells have no nuclei • Lifespan of only 120 days – die at the rate of 2 million /sec (also formed at the same rate)
White Blood Cells (wbc) • Also produced in bone marrow • Body’s disease fighters • Some recognize disease-causing organisms and alert body • Some produce chemicals to fight the invaders • Others surround and kill the organisms • Only 1 wbc for every 500rbc • Larger than rbc; contain a nucleus • Some only live for a few hours, but most can last for months or even years
Platelets • Platelets are cell fragments that play an important role in forming blood clots • Platelets collect around a cut blood vessel, release chemicals that set off a chain reaction • Produces fibrin. Weaves tiny fibers across cut, act as a net to trap blood cells and plasma • Eventually plasma hardens and forms a clot • Scab is a blood clot on the skin surface
Blood Types • 1700s Jean Baptiste Denis tried transferring blood from a lamb to a human • Unsuccessful • Not until 1901 that Karl Landsteiner learned why, he mixed plasma of one person with blood cells of another, sometimes they blended smoothly, sometimes they clumped • Clumping accounted for failure of blood transfusions
Marker Molecules • Four major types of blood – A, AB, B, O • Determined by marker proteins on rbc’s called A and B • Blood group is determined by the presence of the protein on the rbc • Type A has the A protein • Type B has the B protein • Type AB has both • Type O has neither • Plasma has proteins called clumping proteins – recognize foreign markers (not your) and make those cells clump together
Blood group AIf you belong to the blood group A, you have A antigens on the surface of your red blood cells and B antibodies in your blood plasma. Blood group BIf you belong to the blood group B, you have B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells and A antibodies in your blood plasma Blood group ABIf you belong to the blood group AB, you have both A and B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells and no A or B antibodies at all in your blood plasma. Blood group 0If you belong to the blood group 0 (null), you have neither A or B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells but you have both A and B antibodies in your blood plasma
SafeTransfusions • People with type A blood can safely receive type A or O • People with Type B blood can safely receive type B or O • People with type AB can safely receive type AB, A, B, and O • People with type O blood can safely receive only type O blood
RH factor • After discovering the ABO blood group, Lansteiner discovered another protein on red blood cells – called Rh factor • 85% of people have the marker, 15% don’t • If a person has this marker protein they are RH positive • If they don’t have this marker they are Rh negative
Lymphatic system Network of vein-like vessels that return fluid to the bloodstream • Some blood in capillaries leaks out and supplies cells with needed materials. • After, the fluid moves into the body’s drainage system – lymphatic system
Lymph • The fluid inside the lymphatic system • Consists of water, dissolved materials such as glucose, white blood cells • Has no pump, moves slowly • Lymphatic vessels connect to veins in the chest and empty their contents back into blood plasma
Lymph Nodes • Small knobs of tissue • Filter lymph, trapping bacteria and other disease causing organisms • When fighting an infection the lymph nodes enlarge – “swollen glands”
Credits • http://www.perfusion.com/perfusion/articles/general/9905-platelet-anatomy/ • http://www.medicalprogress.org/news/newsarchive.cfm?news_id=78 • http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup/blood/blood_cells/white_blood_cells/379226_human_white_blood_cells.php?id=379226 • http://nmhm.washingtondc.museum/news/news.html • http://www.nuxx.net/gallery/v/wallpaper/slideshow.html