Utilisateur
Connective
Transports oxygen, nutrients, hormones
Regulates temp and pH
Provides protection through clotting and combating microbes
7.35-7.45
55% plasma and 45% formed elements
The percent of blood volume occupied by red blood cells
Lymphoid stem cells
Transport oxygen and CO
120 days
Granulocytes and agranulocytes
Produce antibodies to combat infection and provide immunity
Help stop blood loss by forming a platelet plug
150,000-400,000
A condition where an Rh- mother's antibodies attack an Rh+ fetus
- Viscous
- Denser than water
- Temperature is slightly warmer than core body temp
- Males is 5-6 litres while female is 4-6
- Are bi-concave and deform to fit into small capillary beds
- Have mature cells which lack a nucleus and mitochondria
Hemoglobin
A, O
B, AB
B, O
A, AB
Any type
O
A, B, AB
Universal Donor
Universal Recipient
Antigen-antibody reactions, leading to destruction of donor red blood cells (hemolysis)
Rh positive, Rh negative
1. Hemopoietic stem cells differentiate into erythrocytes, leukocrytes and platelets
2. Thrombopoietin causes myeloid stem cells to become megakrayoblasts, which develop into megakaryocyte cells & break into pieces
3. Platelet fragments are enclosed by the plasma membrane, leaving megakaryocytes in red bone marrow and entering the bloodstream
4. Platelets release clotting ingridients from granules and form a plug to limit blood loss
- Irregular, disc shaped
- 2-4 um in diameter
- Many vesicles but NO nucleus
91.5% water
8.5% solutes (proteins: albumins, globulins, fibrinogen)
B Lymphocytes during immune responses to fight antigens
Hypoxia (oxygen deficiency)
Phagocytosis
Hemoctyoblast
White blood cells (WBCs)
Plasma
Platelets
3 key steps:
1. Vascular spasm (blood vessel constriction)
2. Patelet plug formation
3. Bood clotting (coagulation) to stabilize the plug and prevent further blood loss
1. Start as hematopoietic stem cells
2. Differentiate into progenitor cells - hematopoietic stem cells differentiate into either Myeloid Progenitor (form RBCs, platelets, most WBC) or Lymphoid Progenitor (form lymphocytes)
3. Differentiate and mature: Myeloid: Ethrythropoiesis (RBC), thrombopoiesis (platelets), granulopoiesis (granulocytes like neutrophils, etc), monopoiesis (monocytes & macrophages)
Lymphoid: T cells (mature in thymus), B cells (mature in bone marrow), NK cells (mature in bone marrow)
4. Regulation controlled by growth factors
ABO, Rh
- Albumins (54%)
- Globulins (38%)
- Fibrinogen (7%)
8%
- Neutrophils (60-70%)
- Lymphocytes (20-25%)
- Monocytes (3-8%)
- Eosinophils (2-4%)
- Basophils (0.5-1%)
- Immune response against microorganisms
- Inflammation
- Boost immune response of other cells
- Identify antigens and produce antibodies to attack them
- Destroy infected cells
- Remembering antigens
Responsible for allergic response (contain histamine) which produce allergy symptoms like sneezing, runny nose, cough
- Help identify and destroy parasites and cancer cells
Bone marrow
Hematopoietic stem cells