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Blood

Blood. Quiz 25B. The life of an individual depends on a continuous supply of blood to all parts of the body. If this supply should fail the cell dies. Blood carries:. Food Oxygen Hormones waste products enzymes. Functions of blood. Supply cells with food and oxygen Remove waste products

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Blood

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  1. Blood Quiz 25B

  2. The life of an individual depends on a continuous supply of blood to all parts of the body. If this supply should fail the cell dies.

  3. Blood carries: • Food • Oxygen • Hormones • waste products • enzymes

  4. Functions of blood • Supply cells with food and oxygen • Remove waste products • Fight disease germs

  5. Blood Stats • Blood is a liquid tissue. • Adults have 3-5 quarts of blood. • 80 pound child has approximately 2.5 quarts • 9 pound infant has approximately 10 ounces • high altitudes - has less oxygen - may have up to 2 quarts more blood

  6. blood has 4 main parts • plasma • erythrocytes • leukocytes • platelets

  7. ERYTHROCYTES – red blood cells • appear as red, biconcave discs • don't have nuclei • most numerous of all blood cells • can't move by themselves

  8. ERYTHROCYTES – red blood cells • carry oxygen from lungs to body cells • carry carbon dioxide from body cells to lungs • hemoglobin: iron-containing pigment; gives it its red color

  9. ERYTHROCYTES – red blood cells • formed primarily by your spleen, liver, and red bone marrow • life span approximately 90-120 days

  10. ERYTHROCYTES – red blood cells • normal person contain 25 trillion erythrocytes - enough to go around the earth at the equator 4 times

  11. ERYTHROCYTES – red blood cells • old red blood cells are removed from the blood at a rate of 2 million per second • destroyed mainly in your liver and spleen

  12. LEUKOCYTES – white blood cells • lack hemoglobin • about twice the size of erythrocytes • possess no definite shape • ability to move by themselves

  13. LEUKOCYTES – white blood cells • have nuclei • in a healthy person - ratio of leukocytes to erythrocytes is approximately 1:600

  14. LEUKOCYTES – white blood cells • some are made in bone marrow and others in spleen, tonsils, and thymus gland • life span is approximately 1 to 12 days

  15. LEUKOCYTES – white blood cells • the body needs leukocytes to defend itself from bacteria, viruses, and other harmful substances

  16. LEUKOCYTES – white blood cells there are different types of leukocytes, but all have 1 of 2 functions: (1) engulf and digest (2) produce antibodies (chemicals that attack invading organisms or poisons)

  17. An infection is the invasion of harmful organisms into the body. When the first leukocytes are not successful in stopping the infection, the invading organisms are free to multiply and injure body cells, which results in a swelling and redness called an inflammation in the infected part of the body. Chemicals that are released from the injured cells cause additional leukocytes to move out of blood vessels in order to engulf and digest, or to kill, the harmful invaders.

  18. The leukocytes also digest and remove injured and dead body cells. The accumulation of dead leukocytes, dead organisms, and broken cells forms a thick fluid called pus, which is characteristic of infections.

  19. PLATELETS • very small cell fragments that help in blood clotting • develop from large cells in the red bone marrow • lacks a nucleus • less than 1/2 or 1/3 the size of an erythrocyte • life span is approximately 1 week

  20. BLOOD PLASMA - fluid portion of blood • approximately 90% water • remaining 10% is mostly proteins (also dissolved gases, minerals, nutrients, hormones, and wastes)

  21. Blood Clotting

  22. BLOOD PRESSURE Quiz 25B Continued

  23. Blood Pressure • As your heart beats and the left ventricle forces blood into the aorta, the elastic walls of the arteries expand. • This wave of expansion moves down the aorta and along smaller arteries. • As the wave passes, the elastic walls of the arteries resume their normal size.

  24. Blood Pressure • This dilation and rebounding of an artery is the PULSE. • There is no pulse in a vein because the force of the heart contraction has been absorbed by the blood flowing into the numerous capillaries. • The velocity of blood flow is not uniform throughout the body.

  25. Blood Pressure • blood pressure: the pressure of blood against the walls of arteries • it is the same pressure that causes the pulse • blood pressure can be measured with a SPHYGMOMANOMETER.

  26. systolic pressure blood pressure when the heart is contracting

  27. Diastolic pressure blood pressure while the heart is relaxing

  28. normal blood pressure 120 (systolic) 80(diastolic)

  29. high blood pressure 150 (systolic) 90(diastolic) If the systolic pressure rises to 200 mm Hg or above, there is real danger that an artery may rupture.

  30. Blood Grouping (Blood Types) Quiz 25B Continued

  31. Blood Types • Determined by the presence or absence of certain molecules in the membranes of the erythrocytes. • These molecules, called antigens, stimulate the production of antibodies. • Specialized blood cells produce these antibodies, which are located in the blood plasma.

  32. Blood Types Important in blood transfusions (the giving of blood): • donor - person who gives blood • recipient - person who receives blood

  33. The two blood type classifications:(that are most important in blood transfusion) ABO group Rh system

  34. ABO blood group • discovered in 1901 by Karl Landsteiner • determined by the presence or absence of two antigens A and B

  35. ABO blood group blood types: A - has antigen AB - has antigen BAB - has both antigens A and BO - has neither antigen

  36. ABO blood group In addition to antigens, 3 of these 4 blood types also possess antibodies. The particular antibodies, however, were not present at birth but were produced between the 2nd and 8th months of life as the body responded to antigens A and B in the person's food, especially meat. Therefore if a person has type A blood, his body produces anti-B antibodies.

  37. ABO blood group

  38. ABO blood group • Antigens: in red blood cell membrane • Antibodies: in blood plasma • most common - type Orare - type AB

  39. ABO blood group

  40. Blood Transfusions

  41. Blood Transfusions The first successful human blood transfusion was accomplished in 1818 by James Blundell. universal recipient: type ABuniversal donor: type O

  42. The Rh System Named after the rhesus monkey from which the Rh antigen was first isolated. It too is based on the presence or absence of an antigen in the red blood cell's membrane.

  43. The Rh System Rh types: Rh+ (have the Rh antigen; 85% of population) Rh- (does not have the Rh antigen; 15% of population)

  44. The Rh System Normally, human blood plasma does not contain anti-Rh antibodies, but these antibodies can be stimulated into production in an Rh- person. For example, when and Rh- person receives Rh+ blood, his body begins to form anti-Rh antibodies. These antibodies remain in his blood plasma. Later, if a second transfusion of Rh+ blood is administered, the anti-Rh antibodies react with the Rh antigens of the donor's blood.

  45. Typing Blood O Obtain a Blood Test Card and 3 toothpicks. Place a drop of Anti-A serum (blue) in the circle labeled “Anti-A.” Replace the cap on the Anti-A vial. Always replace the cap on one vial before opening the next vial to prevent cross contamination. Place a drop of Anti-B serum (yellow) in the circle labeled “Anti-B” and then replace the cap.

  46. Typing Blood Place a drop of Anti-D serum (clear) in the circle labeled “Anti-D.” Replace the cap on the Anti-D vial. Place a drop of blood in each “blood” circle.

  47. Typing Blood Mix each drop of blood with the anti-serum adjoining it.

  48. Typing Blood If your blood cells stick together when mixed with anti-A serum, then you have type A blood. If your blood cells stick together when mixed with anti-B serum, then you have type B blood.

  49. Typing Blood If your blood cells stick together when they are mixed with both anti-A and anti-B serums, then you have type AB blood. If your blood cells do not stick together in the presence of either serum, then you have type O blood.

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