9. introduction to haematology Flashcards

1
Q

how much blood does a heart pump in one circulation?

A

5L

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2
Q

% of RBC, white cells and plasma

A

42-45, 1, 55-58

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3
Q

what does plasma contain?

A

water, electrolytes, glucose, lipids, metabolites, gas, hormones, drugs, plasma proteins: albumin, globulin and fibrinogen

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4
Q

what does albumin do?

what does globulin do?

fibrinogen

A

transport, colloidal osmotic pressure

transport, clotting precursors to hormones , defence

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5
Q

what is serum

A

coagulated plasma (no clotting factors)

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6
Q

lifespan of RBC

A

3 months, 120 days

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7
Q

which white cells are phagoctyes?

which are immunocytes?

A
  • granulocytes: neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils
  • monocytes

lymphocytes

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8
Q

blood cell production (haemopoiesis)

A

fetus+ neonate: liver and spleen

neonate, child and adult: bone marrow

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9
Q
A
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10
Q

why is leukaemia common?

A

one stem cell mutation gives rise to millions of mutated daughter cells

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11
Q

what does EPO do

A

kidneys detect low O2 levels and release EPO to bone marrow to signal more RBC production

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12
Q

How is the production of WBC controlled?

A

Colony stimulating factors

stimulated by infections

•Recombinant CSFs useful to improve reduced WBC counts after anticancer drugs – caution leukaemia (they have mutated WBC)

interleukins also play a role

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13
Q

what is haematocrit

A

packed cell volume

% of blood that is RBC

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14
Q

haemoglobin

A

to identify anaemia

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15
Q

Mean corpuscular volume

A

volume of individual RBC

haematocrit/ RBC per litre

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16
Q

Hb/RBC

A

•gives mean corpuscular Hb (MCH) – reduced when cells are small/iron deficiency

17
Q

Hb/PCV

A

•gives mean corpuscular Hb concentration (MCHC) – lowered when cells are large with impaired haem production (macrocytic anaemia)

18
Q

what is -philia (and cytosis)

-penia

pancytopenia

A

increased count

reduced count

reduced count in everything

19
Q

how are blood groups determined

discuss groups A, B, AB, O,

A

by antigens on RBC

  • A : A antigens, has b-antibodies
  • B : B antigens, has a-antibodies if exposed to a blood
  • AB : AB antigens cannot produce antibodies attack themselves
  • O : no A or B antigens but has a and b antibodies
20
Q

clinically important blood groups

A

ABO and rhesus

21
Q

which blood groups are most common

what is O rhesus negative used for

A

A and O

universal donor for all emergencies

complication: acute haemolytic transfusion reactions

22
Q

Rhesus D antigens

A

if mother is rhesus negative, its likely to child is positive thus during birth or miscarriage, the mother will develop antibodies

the next pregnancy can be attacked by the antibodies against positive- haemolytic disease of newborn

this can be stopped by giving anti-D immunisation to mother after delivery of 1st child to bind to infant cells passed onto mother to prevent production of anti bodies