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Index
»
Science
»
Chapter 1
»
BLOOD
level: BLOOD
Questions and Answers List
level questions: BLOOD
Question
Answer
Bone marrow of the axial skeleton
hematopoiesis
All blood cells are generated here
Red blood marrow
Stem cells in bone marrow, can differentiate- become any formed element
Hemocytoblast
formation of red blood cells (in red bone marrow)
Erythropoiesis
Can reproduce new cells, can’t repair themselves, exposed to a lot of damage, short life spans; so important to keep making new ones!
Red blood cells
a glycoprotein secreted by the kidneys that stimulates the production of red blood cells when the kidneys sense there are low oxygen levels, it goes to red bone marrow and tells the hemocytoblasts to become red blood cells
erythropoietin
Why would there be low O2 levels?
Not enough r.b. cells because bleeding
Responsible for checking r. b. cells for damage, if finds any, destroys them so we don’t have damaged cells ; called the “r.b. cell graveyard”
Spleen
Disorders of r.b. cells
Anemia (not enough rb cells)
Is a red blood cell disease, recessive gene
Sickle cell anemia
Hereditary bleeding disorder, missing a protein needed in clotting cascade(process) to uncap fibrin
Hemophilia
Blood- transports:
Waste, nutrients, O2,CO2, hormones
Blood - regulates:
Body temp
Blood - protects:
prevents infection
Blood is made of:
Plasma, erythrocytes, leukocytes, thrombocytes
Red blood cells
Erythrocytes
White blood cells
Leukocytes
Platelets
Thrombocytes
Had to be formed by red bone marrow, not just absorbed/ liquid ( ex: erythrocytes, leukocytes, thrombocytes)
Formed elements
Liquid portion of blood, mostly made of water, has solutes: ions, nutrients, gasses, hormones ,everything we transport
Plasma
Floating in plasma, not taken in by/part of any cell, functions on its own
Plasma proteins
Plasma proteins
Albumin, globulins, fibrinogen
Most abundant plasma protein, responsible for osmotic pressure (how much water in/out of cell, etc.)
Albumin
There are three types: alpha-, beta- , and gamma -. They’re antibodies, transport ions and vitamins
Globulins
Responsible for clotting ( plasma protein)
Fibrinogen
Red blood cells, have small indentation on both sides, no nucleus or other organelles (bag of hemoglobin)
Erythrocytes
Function of erythrocytes
Transport O2 and CO2
No organelles in rb cells: what are the pros?
Needs less energy
No organelles in rib cells: what are the cons?
No repair=> no mitosis (only red bone marrow can replace
Protein, has four polypeptides chains - each has one gene group, so 4 O2 per hemoglobin
hemoglobin
When deoxygenated, is dark red, when oxygenated, is bright red
Hemoglobin
White blood cells and lymphatic system make the immune system, which finds and destroys pathogens
leukocytes
Leukocytes can leave the blood to find pathogens: the process of them leaving is called :
diapedesis
LeukocyteS, have multi- lobe nucleus, are granulocytes, are phagocytes (eat and destroy pathogens)
Neutrophil
Leukocytes; big, round nucleus; is an agranulated (no granules) ;produce antibodies (very important to the immune system)
Lymphocyte
Leukocyte, have kidney shaped nucleus, is an agranulocyte, when leaves blood cells is called Macrophages
monocyte
Leukocytes,Are granulocytes- have pink granuoles; are responsible for tracking/ destroying parasites
Eosinophil
a leukocyte, has blue granuoles (are granulocytes), produce heperine and histamine
Basophil
Prevents blood clotting
heparin
Responsible for allergic reaction
Histamine