Lecture 23 Flashcards

Constituents of Blood

1
Q

How much blood in the human body?

A

its about 7% of the body weight
5L in a 70kg male
4L in a 58kg female

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2
Q

What is blood and what is it made up of?

A

a connective tissue
- 58% plasma (1/4 of body ECF) containing vitamins, proteins and ions
- 42% Cellular Elements red and white blood cells and transported round the body
- 1% platelets used in clotting and hemostasis

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3
Q

The layer of platelets is known as…

A

the Buffy layer

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4
Q

Hematopoeisis

A

the synthesis of blood in red bone marrow in flat bones and proximal ends of long bones

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5
Q

Lifespan of red and white blood cells

A
  • 120 days for red blood cells (25% bone marrow production)
  • 6-12 hours for white blood cells (75% of bone marrow production)
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6
Q

What is the name of the precursor cell for all white. red and platelets

A

pluripotent hematopoitetic stem cells

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7
Q

what are cytokines?

A

proteins that are released from a cell to signal another

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8
Q

Where are the cytokines released and what do they affect?

A

Erythropoietin (EPO) - released from the kidneys to increase red blood cell growth
Thrombopoietin (TPO) - productions of platelets signalled from liver
Interleukins - all types of cells prompted from fibrocytes in the bone marrow

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9
Q

Hypoxia

A

low O2 in the blood

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10
Q

hemoglobin

A

2 alpha and beta dimers forming a tertramer with binding cooperatvity
each heme have a porphyrin ring that contains Fe

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11
Q

Anemia

A

low RBC count by accelerated loss of blood or decreased production

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12
Q

examples of accelerated RBC loss

A
  • blood loss
  • hemolytic anemia
  • genetic like sickle cell
  • acquired like malaria
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13
Q

examples of decreased RBC production

A
  • aplastic anemia from drugs or radiation
  • dietary insuffciencies iron, folic acid and vitamin b12
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14
Q

Difference between Hemostasis and Hemapotesis

A

Hemostasis - keeping blood inside the blood
Hemapotesis - production of blood cells

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15
Q

the 4 stages of hemostasis

A

1) Vasoconstriction
2) Platelet Plug Formation
3) Coagulation (formation of clots)
4) Dissolution of the clot (fibrinolysis)

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16
Q

Explain Vasoconstriction

A

paracrine signal for a release of norepinephrine which will go to the alpha 1 receptors on the smooth muscles and cause ca2+ to be released allowing for constriction

17
Q

Explain platelet plug formation

A

planets constantly flow in the blood, when a cut appears, they stick to the exposed collagen.

18
Q

explain coagulation

A

the formation of a clot
- in the intrinsic pathway, coagulation factors lead to activation of factor 10
- in the extrinsic factor phospholipids and ca2+ are released
- factor 10 uses Ca2+ and the phosolipids to set of Active 10
- in the Common Pathway, Active 10 and Ca2+ turns prothrombin into thrombin
- Thrombin turns Fibrinogen into Fibrin and factor 13 into Active 13
- Active 13 and Ca2+ turns fibrin into cross linked fibrin

19
Q

Explain Fibrinolysis

A

Once tissue is repaired, clot is dissolved by enzyme plasmin

20
Q

Blood Type O

A
  • has no antigens
  • creates antibodies A and B
21
Q

Blood Type A

A
  • has antigen A
  • makes antibodies B
22
Q

Blood Type B

A
  • has antigen B
  • makes antibodies A
23
Q

Blood Type AB

A
  • has both antigens
  • makes no antibodies
24
Q

Why does blood typing occur?

A

if you make antibodies, you cant have blood with that antigen or your blood will clot

25
Q

What makes the rhesus factor different?

A

Rh- people don’t make the rhesus factor unless they are exposed to Rh+

26
Q

What’s the danger to new Rh- mothers

A

if the baby is Rh+, the mother will make antibodies for the Rh+ if their blood mixes. The second baby could then be affected?

27
Q

What’s the solution to the Rh baby issue

A

inject with immune repressors so the mom won’t make the antibodies