Blood: Guided Notes

Blood: Bright scarlet to ______depending on the amount of dissolved______there is. The average person has ______.

Two Parts:______

Nonliving:

Plasma ______including- fluid matrix, nutrients, ______, proteins, pH ______, 90% water, ______, wastes, and salts.

Living:

-Erythrocytes: ______

-Leukocytes: ______

-Thrombocytes: ______

Erythrocytes:

Biconcave discs ______. Anucleated-______day lifespan rbc ______wbc 1,000 to 1. Red blood cells: ______.

Anemia

It is a ______. Normal limits are:

4.5-5.5 million cells/mm, Hematocrit-packed cell volume, 42-47%. Hemoglobin ______.

Two ways to be anemic:

1) Decrease in the ______.

Examples include:

Hemorrhagic anemia, ______anemia (rupture of ______), and ______anemia (destruction of ______marrow).

2) Decrease in the ______. Examples include:

Iron ______, sickle cell anemia, and ______anemia (deficiency of ______).

Blood Types:

Different blood groups are classified on the basis of specific ______called ______that are on the ______.

Types:

-A antigen= ______

-B antigen=______

-A and B antigen= ______

-O blood type= ______

If a person is given ______, plasma ______will attack the foreign antigens leading to a ______.

-O is the ______since there are no ______on the cells. O can only receive ______. The antigens on A, B, and AB would cause a ______.

Rhesus Blood Typing:

Rhesus blood typing= ______.

Rh+ means ______.

Rh-(negative) means ______.

Rh- and Rh+ Interactions:

If an Rh- person receives Rh+ blood, the first time ______.

The second time, an immune reaction occurs and ______.

Erythroblastosis fetalis:

There are problems in pregnancy if an Rh- mother has her second Rh+ baby. The baby will suffer erythroblastosis fetalis-causes ______. It can cause ______.

RhoGAM- an ______given to a pregnant mother after her first pregnancy if the baby is ______.

Leukocytes:

White blood cell (wbc), ______. Mobilize to fight ______, migrate to the site of ______. Attracted by ______from the injured cells.

Types of Leukocytes: Granulocytes and Agranulocytes:

Granulocytes- ______.

Neutrophils-fine granules, 3-7 lobe, deep purple, ______.

Eosinophils-large granules, bi-lobed, increase during ______.

Basophils- few, large purple granules, U or S shaped, nuclei stains blue, ______(a vasodilator), and ______.

Agranulocytes-no ______, oval nuclei, and are ______.

Lymphocytes-large, ______. Spherical ______.

-B type produce ______.

-T type activate ______.

-Fight ______.

Monocytes- gray cytoplasm. Dark blue, ______.

-Active ______.

-Long term ______.

-Found in ______.

Leukemia

There are different types:

-Acute leukemia is______.

-Chronic leukemia is ______.

What happens in leukemia?

In all leukemias, the ______bone marrow is ______by cancerous leukocytes, and ______wbc flood the ______.

-Symptoms: fever, weight loss, ______.

Thrombocytes (platelets)

Cell fragments, small, ______. Function in ______.

Hemophilia

Hemophilia refers to bleeding ______that are ______on the X chromosome. In hemophilia, there is a lack of ______factors.

People who have hemophilia have to avoid ______. Hemophilia causes patients to bleed ______. It is a very ______disease, but has treatment.

Clots

Thrombus= ______

Embolus= ______

Some ______clots can travel to the ______, and can be lethal.

Blood Transfusions

-Used when ______.

-In other cases, ______of packed ______help to restore ______carrying capacity.

-Blood banks take the ______.