Lecture 13: Composition and General Functions of Blood Mon 3 August Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three general functions of blood?

A

Transport
Immune response
Coagulation

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2
Q

What 10 things does the body have to transport?

A
  1. O2
  2. CO2
  3. water
  4. nutrients
  5. Ions associated with pH and homeostasis
  6. heat
  7. hormones
  8. waste products
  9. immune cells
  10. coagulation
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3
Q

What is involved in the immune function of blood?

A

WBC (mostly) move in the blood to identify and destroy pathogens

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4
Q

What is involved in the coagulation function of blood?

A

Platelets and coagulation factors in the plasma are responsible for blood clotting to prevent bleeding

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5
Q

Describe the composition of blood

A
  • 55% plasma

- 45% formed elements

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6
Q

Describe the composition of plasma

A
  • water
  • plasma proteins
  • other solutes
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7
Q

What is the largest component of plasma?

A

water (92%)

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8
Q

What three things make up the formed elements of blood?

A
  1. Platelets
  2. WBC
  3. RBC
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9
Q

What is the largest component of formed elements?

A

RBC (99.9%)

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10
Q

What are platelets?

A

Cell fragments that participate in clotting to stop bleeding

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11
Q

What is hematopoiesis?

A

The formation of blood cells

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12
Q

Where is hematopoiesis initiated?

A

In the bone marrow

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13
Q

Describe the process of hematopoiesis

A

hemocytoblasts is the progenitor that differentiates into all the different blood cells in the bone marrow

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14
Q

What is the signal that makes hemocytoblasts differentiate into RBC?

A

the release of erythropoietin (EPO) which signals hemocytoblasts to go down the path to make RBC

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15
Q

Describe the shape of RBC

A

biconcave disc shape with a large surface area:volume ratio

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16
Q

What is the benefit of RBC having a large surface area:volume ratio?

A

Allows for efficient diffusion of gases and allows flexible movement through narrow capilaries

17
Q

Do RBC have nuclei? Why?

A

No because they differentiate from the hemocytoblasts and because it needs to fit as much haemoglobin as possible

18
Q

Describe the characteristics of RBC

A
  • contains large amounts of haemoglobin
  • haemoglobin takes up one third of the weight of RBC
  • haemoglobin uses iron as part of the haem to bind O2
  • four heam units per haemoglobin so each haemoglobin can bind to four O2 molecules
19
Q

What is hematocrit?

A

The fraction of blood occupied by the red blood cells

20
Q

What is low hematocrit called?

A

anemic

21
Q

What is high hematocrit called?

A

polycythemic

22
Q

What is the effect of testosterone on the production of RBC?

A

More testosterone = more EPO released = more RBC formed from hemocytoblasts so higher hematocrit

23
Q

Why do athletes train at high altitudes?

A

high altitudes = less O2 in the air = increased secretion of EPO from the kidneys = more RBC formation = more O2 can bind

24
Q

What is erythropoiesis?

A

the formation of red blood cells stimulated by erythropoietin