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Blood • Connective tissue • Average adult has ~ 5 L • Made up of formed elements and plasma Formed elements • Red blood cells (erythrocytes) • White blood cells (leukocytes) • Platelets (thromobocytes) Plasma • Makes up about 55% of the blood volume • Composed of about 92% water • Plasma proteins – Albumin – Globulin: antibodies of immunity, transport of lipids, fat soluble vitamins – Fibrinogen—blood clotting mechanism – Enzymes and hormones Plasma cont • Nutrients and gases: – Amino acids, sugars, lipids such as cholesterol and triglycerides – Oxygen and Carbon dioxide Plasma cont • Non-protein nitrogenous substances such as urea and uric acids • Electrolytes such as sodium, potassium, bicarbonate RBC • Structure: biconcave disc—shape increases surface area • Have no nucleus when mature • Are about 1/3 hemoglobin—O2 carrying protein RBC numbers • Normal male • Normal female ~4.6-6.2 million/cc ~4.2-5.4 million/cc • Hematocrit--% of blood volume that is red cells—normal is around 45% for males, a little lower for females • Hematocrit is closely related to oxygen carrying capacity RBC production • • • • • Hematopoesis Occurs in adults in red bone marrow Average life span of rbc is about 120 days Replacement is continuous—homeostatic Affected by dietary factors—must have sufficient Vitamin B12, folic acid and iron RBC production • Triggered by oxygen deficiency • Hormone erythropoetin goes to bone marrow and triggers production of rbcs • High altitude athletic training RBC destruction • RBCs are damaged over time and rupture • They are phagocytized and the hemoglobin is broken down into heme and globin (protein) • Heme is broken down into iron (reused to make more rbcs) and a substance called bilirubin which is excreted as bile Anemia • Defined as lack of rbcs or oxygen carrying capacity of rbcs • Causes – Too few rbcs being produced (bone marrow problem) – Increased destruction (sickle cell) – Loss of blood – Too little iron (small, pale rbcs) Sickle cell anemia Sickle cell anemia cont • Cells are misshapen and do not flow through the vessels easily • Increased destruction of rbcs • Anemia, microclots • Recessive inherited disorder WBCs • • • • • Function in disease control Normal value is ~4,000-11,000/cc Produced in bone marrow Have a nucleus 5 types totaling 100% Granulocytes • Live ~ 12 hours • Divided into 3 categories – Neutrophils ~40-70% • • • • Fine granules in nucleus Nucleus is lobed Phagocytic Increased numbers in bacterial infections and burns • Eosinophils ~ 1-4% – Deep red granules – Increased in allergy, parasitic infections • Basophils ~ 0-1% – Dark blue granules – Granules contain histamine which is a vasodilator—increases blood flow to damaged tissues Monocytes • Monocytes ~ 4-8% – large kidney shaped nucleus – Grayish-blue cytoplasm with no granules – Live for months – Phagocytic—clean up crew – Increased in chronic infections Lymphocytes • Lymphocytes ~ 20-45% – Small amount of cytoplasm with larger dark blue nucleus – B lymphs—produce antibodies – T lymphs—fight viruses, tumors, active in graft rejection and activate B lymphs – Live for years Platelets • Not a complete cell – Irregular shaped pieces of cell – Produced in bone marrow • Normal value ~250,000-500,000/cc • Part of the clotting mechanism—cling together to provide a plug at the site of a broken or torn blood vessel and initiate the clotting process