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Blood What is blood? • A type of connective tissue • Composed of scattered cells within a noncellular matrix • Two major components – Cells (red, white, platelets) 45% – Plasma (water, amino acids, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, vitamins, hormones, electrolytes, cellular waste) 55% General functions of blood – transportation, regulation, protection Characteristics of blood: Amount – 4 to 6 liters; cells – plasma: Color – arterial blood: venous blood: Viscosity – resistance to flow; importance: pH – slightly alkaline. Question: What is the normal pH range of blood? Blood Components Plasma • Plasma – – – – Liquid Transport medium Plasma proteins Temperature regulation Plasma Proteins • Clotting factors – Prothrombin – Fibrinogen • Globulins – Alpha – Beta – Gamma • Albumin Blood Cells • Red blood cells • White blood cells – – – – – Basophils Eosinophils Neutrophils Monocytes Lymphocytes • Platelets Blood Cells: Erythrocytes – Normal RBC count 4.5 to 6.0 million/microliter – Hct 38% to 48% – Hgb 12-18gm/dL – Function: carry oxygen – Formed in red bone marrow – Vitamin B12, intrinsic factor – Lack a nucleus at maturity – 600 RBCs for every WBC Erythropoiesis • Erythrocyte formation • 2.5 million new cells a second • Erythropoeitin • Rate regulated by oxygen levels Red Blood Cells • 120 life span • Damaged cells removed by tissue macrophage system • Old RBCs phagocytized • Iron recycled White blood cells – leukocytes – produced in the red bone marrow and lymphatic tissue Structure: larger than RBCs; have nuclei. Granular WBCs: neutrophils, eosinophils, and basophils. Agranular WBCs: lymphocytes and monocytes. WBCs often carry out their functions in tissue fluid and lymphatic tissue. Leukocytes • Granular – – – Neutrophils Eosinophils Basophils • Agranular – Lymphocytes – Monocytes • Produced in red bone marrow and lymphatic • • tissue Larger than RBCs All have a nucleus Leukocytes • • • • • • • • Normal WBC 5,000 to 10,000/microliter Leukopenia Neutrophils - 58 percent Eosinophils - 2 percent Basophils - 1 percent Bands - 3 percent Monocytes - 4 percent Lymphocytes - 4 percent White blood cells Functions Neutrophils and monocytes – Eosinophils – Basophils – Lymphocytes – T cells B cells Natural killer cells Platelets (thrombocytes) – produced in the red bone marrow Structure: fragments of megakaryocytes. Platelets help maintain the vascular endothelium, and contribute to all mechanisms of hemostasis. Vascular spasm – large vessels. Platelet plugs – capillaries. Thrombocytes • Not whole cells • Fragments of megakaryocytes • Thrombopoietin • Normal plt count: 150,000300,000/microliter • Thrombocytopenia • Hemostasis Clotting • Stage 1 – Formation of prothrombin activator • Stage 2 – Prothrombin is converted to thrombin by prothrombin activator • Stage 3 – Thrombin converts fibrinogen to fibrin Clot Formation • • • Vessel injury Platelet plug formation Blood coagulation Blood types (genetic) The ABO group (see Table 11–1) – four types: The antigens on the RBCs: The antibodies in the plasma: Importance: The Rh factor (the D antigen) Rh positive: Rh negative: Questions: Which ABO type is most common? Least common? Which Rh type is most common? Blood Typing Blood Typing • Genetically defined Blood type: positive or negative • Rh factor • Rhesus factor • Discovered in 1940 • 85% of population is Rh+ • Infusion of Rh+ blood into an Rh- individual will cause agglutination of cells Wrap-Up Question Name the part or aspect of blood described. 1. Last clotting factor to be split 2. Waste product of RBC destruction 3. WBC that can be T or B 4. Carries heat 5. Protein that carries oxygen 6. Block ruptures in capillaries 7. Organ that produces clotting factors 8. Site of most blood cell production Vocabulary to know • • • • • • • Leukemia Erythrocyte Reticulocyte Band cells Phagocyte Megakaryocyte hemocytoblast • • • • • • • Fibrinolysis Anemia Leukocytosis Thrombocytopenia Anemia Plasma hematocrit • Normal range for cell counts • Mineral needed for chemical clotting • Causes of the types of anemia • Function of blood cells