Title: Chapter 18 The Circulatory System: Blood
1Chapter 18The Circulatory System Blood
- Blood Functions and properties
- Blood cell production
- Erythrocytes (RBC)
- Leukocytes (WBC)
- Hemostasis
- Blood types
2Functions and Properties of Blood
- Function Helps cells get nutrition, gets rid of
waste - Two types of fluid Blood and Interstitial
- Blood is the transported
- Interstitial fluid is the diffuser
3Hematology
- The study of blood
- (Hemo blood, -ology study)
- Blood is as unique as your fingerprints
- Most cells cannot move around to get oxygen and
nutrients and get rid of waste, the blood system
does this for them. - INTO the BLOOD- Oxygen from the lungs, nutrients
from the small intestines - OUT OF the BLOOD- Waste goes out the kidneys,
skin and large intestine
4Two Functions of Blood
- 1. Transport- oxygen, nutrients, waste
- 2. Protection- clotting, immunity white blood
cells (WBC), interferon, complement
5Physical Characteristic of Blood
- Alkaline 7.4 pH avg.
- 8 of body weight (if you were a 100 bill,
about 8 of you would be blood) - Blood volume 1.2 gallon female, 1.5 gallon male
- Temperature of the blood is a little higher then
body temperature, WHY? ______________
6Components of Blood
- If Blood is spun down (centrifuged), we see two
parts - 1. Plasma- liquid
- If this is allowed to clot what remains is called
serum - 2. Cells- bottom of tube
- Cells of the blood are mostly red blood cells
(RBCs). The rest, only 1, is basically
platelets and white blood cells (WBCs)
7Centrifuging Blood
- Centrifuging blood forces cells to separate from
plasma - Hematocrit is the of total volume of cells
- Normal crit females 42 avg., males 47 avg.
8Hematocrit Tells Us
- Hematocrit of 40 means that 40 of the blood is
__ __ __s - Does a doctor do a hematocrit to determine the
amount of WBCs or platelets? YES NO - Then what is in the buffy coat? ________
- Abnormal
- Low crit Anemia, decreased ________
- High crit Polycythemia
9Polycythemia
- Polycythemia is an excess of RBC
- primary polycythemia is due to cancer of
erythropoietic cell line in the red bone marrow - Hematocrit of 80
- secondary polycythemia from dehydration,
emphysema, high altitude, or physical
conditioning - Dangers of polycythemia
- increased blood volume, pressure and viscosity
can lead to embolism, stroke or heart failure
10Plasma Proteins
- 3 major categories of plasma proteins
- Albumins are most abundant plasma protein
- Globulins (antibodies) provide immune system
defenses - alpha, beta and gamma globulins
- Fibrinogen creates fibrin threads that causes
blood to clot
11Formation of Blood Cells
- Hemopoiesis- Blood making
- Lymphoid hemopoiesis occurs in widely distributed
lymphoid tissues (thymus, tonsils, lymph nodes,
spleen peyers patches in intestines) - red bone marrow produces RBCs, WBCs and platelets
- SEQUENCE
- 1.) Stem cells
- 2.) Committed cells
- 3.) Precursor Cells
- 4.) Final blood cells
12Hemopoiesis
13Hypoxia An important concept
- Cellular oxygen deficiency is hypoxia (hypo
under, ox oxygen) - Ischemia is a from of hypoxia due to obstruction
of blood flow (as by the narrowing of arteries by
spasm or disease) - This can cause cell death (necrosis)
- Occurs in many situations
- High altitude
- Anemia
- Iron or B12 deficiency resulting in anemia
- Circulatory problems
14Erythrocyte Homeostasis
- Classic negative feedback control
- drop in RBC count causes hypoxemia to kidneys
- stimulation of bone marrow
- RBC count ? in 3-4 days
- Stimulus for erythropoiesis
- Hypoxia is a stimulus for blood production such
as - low levels of atmospheric O2 (high altitude)
- increase in exercise
- Circulatory problems
- Anemia from Iron or B12 deficiency
15Erythropoiesis Making RBCs
16Lab Test for RBC creation
- Reticulocyte count (Tic) measures the rate of
erythropoiesis and so can give an indication of
RBC creation. - Normal avg. 1 --- because about 1 of RBCs are
replaced in a day therefore about 1 of the blood
is reticulocytes - Low tic count red bone marrow not working.
Cause nutritional deficiency or leukemia - High tic count usually good sign, response to
iron therapy
17Red Blood Cells (RBCs)
- RBCs are called erythrocytes (red, cells)
- Oxygen-carrying cells
- Contains oxygen-carrying protein called
hemoglobin - Anatomy- 7.5 microns, biconcave disc- can get
into small places - large surface area helps diffusion of gases
- No nucleus or organelles so ample space for
oxygen - Gets energy anaerobically
- So it doesnt need the oxygen that its carrying
18Erythrocytes on a Needle
19Leukocyte Production (Leukopoiesis)
- Some lymphocytes leave bone marrow unfinished
- go to thymus to complete their development (T
cells) - Circulating WBCs do not stay in bloodstream
- granulocytes leave in 8 hours
- monocytes leave and transform into macrophages
- WBCs provide long-term immunity lasting decades
20Platelet Production
- Cells called megakaryocyte create platelets
- Cytoplasm of the cell splits off creating cell
fragments that enter the bloodstream as platelets
(live for 10 days) - some stored in spleen released as needed
- Platelets are important for _________
21Erythrocytes and Hemoglobin Tests
- RBC count hemoglobin concentration indicate the
amount of oxygen the blood can carry - hemoglobin concentration of whole blood
- men avg. 15 women avg. 14
- RBC count
- men 5.5 million avg. women 5 million avg.
22Erythrocyte Death Disposal
- RBCs live for 120 days
- membrane fragility -- lysis in narrow channels in
the spleen through a process called ____________ - Macrophages in spleen
- remove iron from heme
- convert heme to bilirubin (yellow pigment)
- Why cant RBCs repair themselves?
- Bilirubin is converted to urobilogen in the
intestine by bacteria giving fecal matter its
brown color
23Anemia
- Causes of anemia
- Decreased RBCs or hemoglobin
- inadequate dietary vitamin B12
- Or lack of intrinsic factor in the stomach
(pernicious anemia) - iron-deficiency anemia
- If in males and post-menopausal females check for
hemorrhage - aplastic anemia can be drug induced marrow
destruction - Anemia (normocytic) causes ABCDAcute blood
lossBone marrow failureChronic dietary
deficiencyDestruction (hemolysis)
24Anemia
- Effects of anemia
- FATigue
- Heart races
- Edema
- Low blood pressure
- Pallor
- Shortness of breath
- (Fat HELPS)
25Sickle-Cell Disease
- Sickle-Cell is hereditary Hemoglobin defect of
African Americans - sickle-cell disease individual has shortened life
- cell stickiness causes agglutination and blocked
vessels - intense pain, kidney and heart failure,
paralysis, and stroke - Sickle cell Disease-codominant genetic disorder,
resistant to malaria. Why? - Because sickle cells hemoglobin is indigestible
to malaria parasites
26Sickle-Cell Diseased Erythrocyte
27Blood Types
- The surface of RBCs contain genetically
determined antigens (antibody generator) these
determine the blood types - Major blood types are ABO and Rh
- ABO blood group are based on people that have
blood antigens A or B - If you have A antigen on your RBCs you are type
A, if you have B antigens you are type B, and
type AB has both antigens but if you dont have
any A or B antigens you are type O. - Remember This applies to incoming blood
28Blood Type Diet Theory
- Type O is said to be the Original blood type, no
antigens. These were the hunters. Diet is meat
based. Native Americans are 79 type Os. - Type A is the Agrarian blood type. These are the
farmers. Diet is vegetarian. - Blood type demo http//www.svgs.k12.va.us/Outreac
h/Activities/aborh/Flash/ABORhbloodtyping.swf
29ABO Blood Typing
- Agglutination is the term for blood clumping
- For example type A has agglutination on the left
which tells us this blood reacted with anti-A - Type AB has agglutination to both ____ and ______
30Blood Swapping
- Type AB- universal ABceptor, person can be
infused with any type of blood - Type O- universal dOnor, can give their blood to
anyone - Caveat Remember that blood contains other
antigens and antibodies than ABO, so specific
typing should always be done to avoid
Agglutination (clumping) - Agglutination is massive clumping which is
distinct from normal clotting (like from a cut)
31The Rh Group
- Rh or D agglutinogens discovered in Rhesus monkey
- If you have the Rh antigen you are Rh
- If you dont have the Rh antigen you are Rh-
- Anti-D agglutinins are not normally present in
blood - formed only in individuals exposed to Rh blood
- Rh- pregnant woman carrying an Rh fetus
- no problems result with the first pregnancy
- hemolytic disease of the newborn
(erythroblastosis fetalis) occurs if mother has
formed antibodies is pregnant with 2nd Rh
child - RhoGAM is given to pregnant woman to prevent
antibody formation and prevent any future
problems - Relate disease Peanut butter should be avoided
in ____ peanut butter cup syndrome
32Hemolytic Disease of Newborn
- Mothers antibodies attack fetal blood causing
toxic brain syndrome from excessive bilirubin in
blood from hemolysis - treatment is phototherapy to degrade bilirubin or
complete exchange transfusion to replace all the
infants blood
33White Blood Cells (WBCs)WBC are also called
Leukocytes (leuko white, cyte old cell)-Have
nucleus but no hemoglobin________________________
_____________
- AGRANULAR
- Lymphocytes
- Monocytes
- GRANULAR
- Neutrophils
- Eosinophils
- Basophiles
34Granular Leukocyte (WBCs)
- Granulocytes- when stained these show granules
under the microscope - basophils non-abundant, dark violet granules
(lt1) - large U- to S-shaped nucleus hidden by granules
- eosinophils - pink-orange granules bilobed
nucleus (2-4) - neutrophils - multilobed nucleus (60-70)
- fine reddish to violet granules in cytoplasm
- Older neutrophils are called polymorphonuclear
(PMN) leukocytes or POLYS - BEN
35Granulocyte Functions
- Neutrophils (? in bacterial infections)
- phagocytosis of bacteria
- releases antimicrobial chemicals
- Eosinophils (? in parasitic infections or
allergies) - phagocytosis of antigen-antibody complexes,
allergens inflammatory chemicals - release enzymes destroy parasites such as worms
- Basophils (? in chicken pox, sinusitis, diabetes)
- secrete histamine (vasodilator)
- secrete heparin (anticoagulant)
36Agranular Leukocyte (WBCs)
- These cells do contain granules but do not stain
and are small - Monocytes- the cops of the body
- The blood is a transport system (cop car) for
monocytes as they fight infection in tissues - They go into tissue and become macrophages
(macro big, phage eater) - Lymphocytes- cytoplasm stains and forms a blue
rim around the cell - B cells, T cells and Killer cells
37Agranulocyte Functions
- Lymphocytes (? in diverse infections immune
responses) - destroy cancer foreign cells virally infected
cells - coordinate actions of other immune cells
- secrete antibodies provide immune memory
- Monocytes (? in viral infections inflammation)
- differentiate into macrophages
- phagocytize pathogens and debris
38LYMPHOCYTES
- Major types are B cells, T cells, and natural
killer cells which are major warriors in the
immune response - B cells- from Bone marrow
- Good at destroying Bacteria
- T cells- Formed in bone marrow but matures in the
Thymus gland - Good at attacking virus, fungi, cancer cells and
Transplanted organs - Killer cells- kill microbes and tumor cells
39Increased and Decreased WBCs
- INCREASED
- Neutrophils- bacteria
- Lymphocytes- virus
- Monocytes-virus, fungus
- Eosinophils-allergy, parasites
- Basophils- allergy, cancer
- DECREASED
- Neutrophils- radiation, drugs, nutrition
deficiency - Lymphocytes- chronic illness
- Monocytes-bone marrow depression
- Eosinophils-drugs, stress
- Basophils- pregnancy, stress
40WBC Pathology
- Leukocytosis- increased WBCs
- usually normal
- Due to stresses such as microbes and strenuous
exercise - Leukopenia- decreased WBCs
- Abnormal
- due to shock or drug reactions or disease
41WBC pathology- Leukemia
- Leukemia cancer of hemopoietic tissue
- Uncontrolled WBC production
- Subject to opportunistic infection, anemia
- Acute Leukemia- immature WBC
- Chronic Leukemia- too many WBCs
- Remission (disappearing) and exacerbation
(occurrence) common
42Normal and Leukemia Blood Smears
- Normal blood ratio 700 RBCs to 1 WBC
43The Action of WBCs
- WBCs leave the bloodstream by emigration
- Phagocytosis- the process of the WBC eating an
invader, a bacteria - Chemotaxis- the process of attracting phagocytes,
caused by toxins that are produced by microbes
destroying tissue - Lysozymes- enzymes that the phagocytes use to
destroy bacteria - A Differential WBC count (Diff) is counting of
the different WBC, determining the percentage of
each type of WBC helps in the diagnosis
44Of Thrombosis and Embolism
- Unwanted coagulation
- Thrombosis the formation of a clot of blood
within a blood vessel - Thrombosis can create a thrombus
- Thrombus a clot of blood formed within a blood
vessel and remaining attached to its place of
origin - most likely to occur in leg veins of inactive
people - the thrombus may break off causing an embolus
- An embolus is an abnormal particle circulating in
the blood - An embolus could travel from veins to lungs
producing pulmonary embolism - death from hypoxia may occur
45Necrosis
- Necrosis Tissue death
- Infarct an area of necrosis in a tissue or
organ resulting from obstruction of the local
circulation - Infarction is the process of forming an infarct
- may occur if an embolus or thrombus blocks blood
supply to an organ (MI or stroke) - 650,000 Americans die annually of thromboembolism
46COAGULATION (BLOOD COTTING) Blood has the
ability to clot together.
This is good and bad, depending.
- BAD
- Thrombosis- blood clotting in vessels forming
BLOOD CLOTS - Embolism- a blood clot, or air bubble or fat,
that blocks a vessel causing Ischemia - Hemorrhage- blood loss. Can be from drugs like
Celebrex, anticoagulants, or vessel tear
- GOOD
- Hemostatis- the process of stopping the bleeding
process
47Anticoagulant Drugs
- Warfarin or Coumadin (rat poison) may be given to
people who have a tendency to produce blood
clots, like in atrial fibrillation - Their blood must be monitored for possible
hemorrhage - These drugs are antagonists to vitamin K
- Streptokinase- produced from streptococcal
bacteria is a thrombolytic agent, it dissolves
blood clots both good and bad. Used in stroke
patients.
48Hemophilia
- Genetic lack of any clotting factor affecting the
patients blood coagulation - Sex-linked recessive in males (inherit from
mother) - Physical exertion causes bleeding excruciating
pain
49Hemostasis - The Control of Bleeding
- Platelet plug is formed by pseudopods that adhere
to the vessels and contract drawing the vessel
together - Fibrin, a sticky protein, comes from the plasma
to trap blood cells
50Formed Elements of Blood
- Never Let Monkeys Eat Bananas- quantities of WBCs
51Nutritional Needs for Erythropoiesis
- B12 folic acid (for rapid cell division) and
vitamin C copper synthesizing RBCs - Iron is key nutritional requirement for
erythropoiesis - lost daily through urine, feces, and bleeding
- low absorption rate requires consumption of 5-20
mg/day - Maintain supplement for six months to replace
liver storage - dietary iron in 2 forms ferric (Fe3) ferrous
(Fe2) - ferrous is the form of iron used by the body (For
US two) - stomach acid converts Fe3 to absorbable Fe2
52Iron Blood Tests
- Transferrin blood test determines how much iron
is bound to the protein that carries iron in the
blood (Trans-port) - Serum ferritin test shows the level of iron in
the liver (FerritIN the liver)
53CBC Blood Test
- Complete Blood Count (CBC) is a composite of
blood tests that measures certain components of
the blood. - RBCs, WBCs and platelets are counted
- ______ the total blood volume of RBCs is
measured - A diff (differential of WBCs) is included
- Hemoglobin content is included- which measures
the amount of the oxygen carrying protein found
in the RBCs