Haemotology - RBCs Flashcards

1
Q

avg abult blood volume

A

5L
~7% of your weight

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2
Q

components of blood

A

45% cells (formed elements):
RBCs
WBCs
platelets

(46-63%) plasma

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3
Q

plasma composition

A

92% water
plasma proteins 7%
other solutes 1% - electrolytes, org nutrients, waste

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4
Q

examples of plasma proteins

A

albumin
globulin
fibrinogen (coagulation protein)
regulatory proteins e.g. hormones

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5
Q

in a centrifuged sample of blood, what does the WBC/platelets layer look like?

A

very thin layer between plasma and RBCs
in healthy person can see less
increased visibility in unhealthy person

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6
Q

what does blood transport and hoe does it defend

A

transports:
gases o2 and co2
nutrients
excretory products
temperature control (alongside blood vessels via vasodil and vasoconst)

defense:
antibodies, wbc
clotting factors (aka haemostatic process)

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7
Q

what is the stem cell that can differentiate into any blood cell

A

multipotential haematopoietic stem cell (haemocytoblast)

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8
Q

which type of cell produces RBCs, platelets and 4 types of WBCs?

A

common myeloid progenitor

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9
Q

which type of cell produces lymphocytes?

A

common lymphoid progenitor

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10
Q

whats the name of the immature cell found in bone marrow that forms 4 key WBCs

A

myeloblast

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11
Q

what is the process of blood cell formation called

A

haematopoiesis

see onenot for detailed diagram and learn it pls xoxo

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12
Q

what is the name of the commited cell in erythropoises

A

proerythroblast

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13
Q

name the order of cell types in erythropoieses

A

haemocytoblast -> proerythroblast -> early erythroblast -> late erythroblast -> normoblast -> reticulocyte -> erythrocyte

see diagram in onenote i made it all pretty

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14
Q

requirements for erythropoiesis

A

erythropoietin
iron
vit B12
folic acid (B9)
intrinsic factor (helps in absorption of B12)
amino acids (for globin production)

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15
Q

RBC structure

A

~7.5micrometres (caps are a lot smaller so they must be flexible)

deform readily, highly flex
no organelles or nucleus
life span = 121 days

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16
Q

breakdown process of a RBC

A

macrophages break down the aged RBCs

spilts Hb into heme and globin

heme turns into Bilirubin + iron
Bilirubin which is combined with serum albumin
transported to liver
secreted into bile

Iron combined with transferrin(transport protein)
stored as ferritin(storage protein) in the liver and spleen

the globin transormed back in into amino acids

see one note for diagram

17
Q

what are some causes of hypoxia

A
  • inc in excercise
  • high altitude
  • smoking
  • bleeding
18
Q

describe erythrocyte homeostasis

A
  1. low o2 blood levels (stimulus)
  2. picked up by blood vessels in kidneys (receptor)
    3 kidneys inc production of erythropoietin
  3. stem cells increase RBC production
  4. o2 blood levels return to normal
19
Q

what stage does Hb synthesis start

A

in the proerythroblast
65% is made at erythroblast
35% is made at reticulocyte stage (after nucleus is gone)

20
Q

how many on avg Hb molecules per RBC?

A

280million~

21
Q

how much (in g/dL) Hb is in blood, females and males

A

F= 12-16 g/dL
M= 13.5-12.5g/dL

22
Q

structure of Hb protein

A

4 subunits (2 alpha 2 beta)

each subunit has a haem
which is bound to globin (long polypeptide chain)

in middle of Haem group is ferrous iron atom (Fe2+)

this atom can bind (reversibly) with one molecule of O2

23
Q

def of anaemia

A

Hb conc in whole blood below the accepted normal range

men - less than 13.5g/dL
women - less than 12g/dL

24
Q

causes of anaemia

A

decreased RBC production - can happen if required units not there (e.g. less B12, folic acid etc)

increased RBC destruction - haemolytic anaemia (RBCs break down faster than made, can be casued by autoimmune disease, bone marrow disease etc.)

blood loss - acute (ie in an accident) or chronic (ie stomach ulcers, endometriosis, cancer etc)

25
Q

iron deficiency anaemia key points

A

most common anaemia

hypochromic (paler coloured cells)
microcytic RBCs (smaller diameter)

decreased mean volume (MCV)

causes -
pregnancy,
bleeding from GI tract (ulcer, malignancy etc), malabsorption,
menorrhagia (period),
malnutrition

diagnosis of iron deficiency not adequate - always seek cause

26
Q

megaloblastic anaemia

A

vit B12 deficiency or folate deficiency (affects the way in which cells mature - hence MEGAloBLASTic cuz theyre large and immature)

macrocytic cells (larger in diameter)

reduced Hb conc.

increased mean cell volume (MCV)

hypersegmented neutrophils (can see in blood smear under microscope)

27
Q

megaloblastic anaemia: as folate deficiency

A

causes macrocytic anaemia

the reason theyre big is cuz they dont mature properly
and cells are unable to divide without folate

causes - pregnancxy, elderly, diet

28
Q

megaloblastic anaemia: as B12 deficiency

A

to absorb B12, we need intrinsic factor (IF)
usually secreted by stomach

cuases:
lack of IF - PERNICIOUS ANAEMIA cuz lack of B12
Crohn’s, coeliac disease - affect absorption too

treatment: Intramuscular B12 inejctions

used to be fatal cuz people didnt know that giving B12 orally wasn’t helping

29
Q

sickle cell anaemia

A

hereditary (african, west indian communities have more)
abrnormal Hb structure
causes sickle shaped cells

RBCs get stuck in blood vessels or
RBCs die prematurely

30
Q

thalassaemias

A

hereditary (mediterranean, middle/far eastern)

Abnormal Hb production - alpha and beta thalassaemias