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Blood
Overview of Blood Circulation
Blood leaves the heart via arteries that
branch repeatedly until they become
capillaries
Oxygen (O2) and nutrients diffuse across
capillary walls and enter tissues
Carbon dioxide (CO2) and wastes move
from tissues into the blood
Overview of Blood Circulation
Oxygen-deficient blood leaves the
capillaries and flows in veins to the heart
This blood flows to the lungs where it
releases CO2 and picks up O2
The oxygen-rich blood returns to the heart
Composition of Blood
Blood is a connective fluid tissue
It is composed of liquid plasma and formed
elements
Formed elements include:
Erythrocytes,
or red blood cells (RBCs)
Leukocytes, or white blood cells (WBCs)
Platelets
Hematocrit – the percentage of RBCs out
of the total blood volume
Components of Whole Blood
Physical Characteristics and
Volume
Blood is a sticky, opaque fluid with a
metallic taste
Color varies from scarlet to dark red
The pH of blood is 7.35–7.45
Temperature is 38C
Blood accounts for approximately 8% of
body weight
Average volume: 5–6 L for males, and 4–5
L for females
Functions of Blood
Blood performs a number of functions
dealing with:
Substance
distribution
Regulation of blood levels of particular
substances
Body protection
Distribution
Blood transports:
Oxygen
from the lungs and nutrients from
the digestive tract
Metabolic wastes from cells to the lungs and
kidneys for elimination
Hormones from endocrine glands to target
organs
Regulation
Blood maintains:
Appropriate
body temperature by absorbing
and distributing heat
Normal pH in body tissues using buffer
systems
Adequate fluid volume in the circulatory
system
Protection
Blood prevents blood loss by:
Activating
plasma proteins and platelets
Initiating clot formation when a vessel is
broken
Blood prevents infection by:
Activating
complement proteins
Activating WBCs to defend the body against
foreign invaders
Blood Plasma
Blood plasma contains over 100 solutes,
including:
– albumin, globulins, clotting
proteins, and others
Lactic acid, urea, creatinine
Organic nutrients – glucose, carbohydrates,
amino acids
Electrolytes – sodium, potassium, calcium,
chloride, bicarbonate
Respiratory gases – oxygen and carbon
dioxide
Proteins
Formed Elements
Erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets
make up the formed elements
Only
WBCs are complete cells
RBCs have no nuclei or organelles, and
platelets are just cell fragments
Most formed elements survive in the
bloodstream for only a few days
Most blood cells do not divide but are
renewed by cells in bone marrow
Components of Whole Blood
Erythrocytes (RBCs)
Biconcave discs, anucleate, essentially no
organelles
Filled with hemoglobin (Hb), a protein that
functions in gas transport
Contain the plasma membrane protein
spectrin and other proteins that:
Give
erythrocytes their flexibility
Allow them to change shape as necessary
Erythrocytes (RBCs)
Erythrocytes (RBCs)
Erythrocytes are an example of the
complementarity of structure and function
Structural characteristics contribute to its
gas transport function
Biconcave
shape has a huge surface area
relative to volume
Erythrocytes are more than 97% hemoglobin
ATP is generated anaerobically, so the
erythrocytes do not consume the oxygen
they transport
Erythrocyte Function
RBCs are dedicated to respiratory gas
transport
Hb reversibly binds with oxygen and most
oxygen in the blood is bound to Hb
Hb is composed of the protein globin, made up
of two alpha and two beta chains, each bound
to a heme group
Each heme group bears an atom of iron, which
can bind to one oxygen molecule
Each Hb molecule can transport four molecules
of oxygen
Structure of Hemoglobin
Hemoglobin (Hb)
Oxyhemoglobin – Hb bound to oxygen
Oxygen
loading takes place in the lungs
Deoxyhemoglobin – Hb after oxygen
diffuses into tissues (reduced Hb)
Carbaminohemoglobin – Hb bound to
carbon dioxide
It
binds to globin’s amino acids
Carbon dioxide loading takes place in the
tissues
Production of Erythrocytes
Hematopoiesis – blood cell formation
Hematopoiesis occurs in the red bone
marrow of the:
Axial
skeleton and girdles
Epiphyses of the humerus and femur
Hemocytoblasts give rise to all formed
elements
Production of Erythrocytes:
Erythropoiesis
A hemocytoblast is transformed into a
proerythroblast
Proerythroblasts develop into early
erythroblasts
Production of Erythrocytes:
Erythropoiesis
The developmental pathway consists of three
phases
1 – ribosome synthesis in early erythroblasts
2 – Hb accumulation in late erythroblasts and
normoblasts
3 – ejection of the nucleus from normoblasts
and formation of reticulocytes
Reticulocytes then become mature erythrocytes
1-2% of RBC in health people
Production of Erythrocytes:
Erythropoiesis
Regulation and Requirements for
Erythropoiesis
Circulating erythrocytes – the number
remains constant and reflects a balance
between RBC production and destruction
Too
few RBCs leads to tissue hypoxia
Too many RBCs causes undesirable blood
viscosity
Erythropoiesis is hormonally controlled and
depends on adequate supplies of iron,
amino acids, and B vitamins
Hormonal Control of
Erythropoiesis
Erythropoietin (EPO) release by the
kidneys is triggered by:
Hypoxia
due to decreased RBCs or
hemoglobin content
Decreased oxygen availability
Increased tissue demand for oxygen
Enhanced erythropoiesis increases the:
RBC
count in circulating blood
Oxygen carrying ability of the blood
Erythropoietin Mechanism
Start
Homeostasis: Normal blood oxygen levels
Stimulus: Hypoxia due to
decreased RBC count,
decreased amount of
hemoglobin, or decreased
availability of O2
Increases
O2-carrying
ability of blood
Reduces O2 levels
in blood
Enhanced
erythropoiesis
increases
RBC count
Erythropoietin
stimulates red
bone marrow
Kidney (and liver to a smaller
extent) releases erythropoietin
Dietary Requirements of
Erythropoiesis
Erythropoiesis requires:
Proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates
Iron, vitamin B12, and folic acid
The body stores iron in Hb (65%), the liver,
spleen, and bone marrow
Intracellular iron is stored in protein-iron
complexes such as ferritin and hemosiderin
Circulating iron is loosely bound to the
transport protein transferrin
Fate and Destruction of
Erythrocytes
The life span of an erythrocyte is 100–120
days
Old RBCs become rigid and fragile, and
their Hb begins to degenerate
Dying RBCs are engulfed by macrophages
Heme and globin are separated and the
iron is salvaged for reuse
Fate and Destruction of
Erythrocytes
Heme is degraded to a green pigment
biliverdin
Biliverdin is converted to a yellow pigment
called bilirubin
The bilirubin is picked up by the liver and
secreted into the intestines as bile
Fate and Destruction of
Erythrocytes
The intestines metabolize it into
urobilinogen and stercobilinogen
These degraded pigments leave the body
in feces and urine, in a pigment called
stercobilin and urobilin
Fate and Destruction of
Erythrocytes
Globin is metabolized into amino acids
and is released into the circulation
Hb released into the blood is captured by
haptoglobin and phagocytized
Low O2 levels in blood stimulate
kidneys to produce erythropoietin.
1
2
3
Erythropoietin levels
rise in blood.
Erythropoietin and necessary
raw materials in blood promote
erythropoiesis in red bone marrow.
4
5
Aged and damaged red
blood cells are engulfed by
macrophages of liver, spleen,
and bone marrow; the hemoglobin
is broken down.
Hemoglobin
New erythrocytes
enter bloodstream;
function about
120 days.
1 Low O2 levels in blood stimulate
kidneys to produce erythropoietin.
2 Erythropoietin levels
rise in blood.
3 Erythropoietin and necessary
raw materials in blood promote
erythropoiesis in red bone marrow.
4 New erythrocytes
enter bloodstream;
function about
120 days.
5 Aged and damaged red
blood cells are engulfed by
macrophages of liver, spleen,
and bone marrow; the hemoglobin
is broken down.
Hemoglobin
Heme
Globin
Bilirubin
Iron stored
as ferritin,
hemosiderin
Amino
acids
Iron is bound to
transferrin and released
to blood from liver
as needed for
erythropoiesis
Bilirubin is picked up from
blood by liver, secreted into
intestine in bile, metabolized
to stercobilin by bacteria
and excreted in feces
Circulation
Food nutrients,
including amino
acids, Fe, B12,
and folic acid
are absorbed
from intestine
and enter blood
6 Raw materials are
made available in
blood for erythrocyte
synthesis.
Erythrocyte Disorders
Anemia
Low RBC count or Hemoglobin content
Low oxygen-carrying capacity
It is a symptom rather than a disease itself
Blood oxygen levels cannot support normal
metabolism
Signs/symptoms include fatigue, paleness,
shortness of breath, and chills
Anemia: Insufficient
Erythrocytes
Hemorrhagic anemia – result of acute or
chronic loss of blood
Hemolytic anemia – prematurely ruptured
RBCs
Aplastic anemia – destruction or inhibition
of red bone marrow
Anemia: Decreased Hemoglobin
Content
Iron-deficiency anemia results from:
A secondary result of hemorrhagic anemia
Inadequate intake of iron-containing foods
Impaired iron absorption
Pernicious anemia results from:
Deficiency of vitamin B12
Lack of intrinsic factor needed for absorption of
B12
Treatment is intramuscular injection of B12
Anemia: Abnormal Hemoglobin
Thalassemias – absent or faulty globin
chain in Hb
RBCs
are thin, delicate, and deficient in Hb
Sickle-cell anemia – results from a
defective gene coding for an abnormal Hb
called hemoglobin S (HbS)
HbS
has a single amino acid substitution in
the beta chain
This defect causes RBCs to become sickleshaped in low oxygen situations
Polycythemia
Polycythemia – excess RBCs that
increase blood viscosity
Three main polycythemias are:
Polycythemia
vera
Secondary polycythemia
Blood doping
Leukocytes (WBCs)
Leukocytes, the only blood components
that are complete cells:
Are
less numerous than RBCs
Make up 1% of the total blood volume
Can leave capillaries via diapedesis
Move through tissue spaces
Leukocytes (WBCs)
Leukocytosis – WBC count over 11,000 /
mm3
Normal
response to bacterial or viral
invasion
Leukopenia – WBC count under
4,000/mm3
Percentages of Leukocytes
Granulocytes
Granulocytes – neutrophils, eosinophils,
and basophils
Contain
cytoplasmic granules that stain
specifically (acidic, basic, or both) with
Wright’s stain
Are larger and usually shorter-lived than
RBCs
Have lobed nuclei
Are all phagocytic cells
Neutrophils
Neutrophils have two types of granules
that:
Take
up both acidic and basic dyes
Give the cytoplasm a lilac color
Contain peroxidases, hydrolytic enzymes,
and defensins (antibiotic-like proteins)
Neutrophils are our body’s bacteria slayers
burst – by metabolizing oxygen
they produce substances that pierce holes in
the germ’s membrane
Respiratory
Eosinophils
Eosinophils account for 1–4% of WBCs
Have
red-staining, bilobed nuclei connected
via a broad band of nuclear material
Have red to crimson (acidophilic) large,
coarse, lysosome-like granules
Lead the body’s counterattack against
parasitic worms
Lessen the severity of allergies by
phagocytizing immune complexes
Basophils
Account for 0.5% of WBCs and:
Have
U- or S-shaped nuclei with two or
three conspicuous constrictions
Have large, purplish-black (basophilic)
granules that contain histamine
Histamine – inflammatory chemical that
acts as a vasodilator and attracts other
WBCs (antihistamines counter this effect)
Mast cells
Are functionally similar to basophils
Agranulocytes
Agranulocytes – lymphocytes and
monocytes:
Lack
visible cytoplasmic granules
Are similar structurally, but are functionally
distinct and unrelated cell types
Have spherical (lymphocytes) or kidneyshaped (monocytes) nuclei
Lymphocytes
Account for 25% or more of WBCs and:
Have
large, dark-purple, circular nuclei with
a thin rim of blue cytoplasm
Are found mostly enmeshed in lymphoid
tissue (some circulate in the blood)
There are two types of lymphocytes: T
cells and B cells
T
cells function in the immune response
B cells give rise to plasma cells, which
produce antibodies
Monocytes
Monocytes account for 4–8% of
leukocytes
They
are the largest leukocytes
They have abundant pale-blue cytoplasms
They have purple-staining, U- or kidneyshaped nuclei
They leave the circulation, enter tissue, and
differentiate into macrophages
Macrophages
Macrophages:
Are
highly mobile and actively phagocytic
Activate lymphocytes to mount an immune
response
Leukocytes
Summary of Formed Elements
51
Summary of Formed Elements
52
Production of Leukocytes
Leukopoiesis is stimulated by interleukins
and colony-stimulating factors (CSFs)
Interleukins
are numbered (e.g., IL-1, IL-2),
whereas CSFs are named for the WBCs
they stimulate (e.g., granulocyte-CSF
stimulates granulocytes)
Macrophages and T cells are the most
important sources of cytokines
Many hematopoietic hormones are used
clinically to stimulate bone marrow
Formation of Leukocytes
All leukocytes originate from
hemocytoblasts
Hemocytoblasts differentiate into myeloid
stem cells and lymphoid stem cells
Myeloid stem cells become eosinophilic,
basophilic and neutrophilic myeloblasts or
monoblasts
Lymphoid stem cells become lymphoblasts
Formation of Leukocytes
The myeloblasts develop into eosinophils,
neutrophils, and basophils
Monoblasts develop into monocytes
Lymphoblasts develop into lymphocytes
56
Leukocytes Disorders: Leukemias
Leukemia refers to cancerous conditions
involving WBCs
Leukemias are named according to the
abnormal WBCs involved
Myelocytic leukemia – involves myeloblasts
Lymphocytic leukemia – involves
lymphocytes
Acute leukemia involves blast-type cells and
primarily affects children
Chronic leukemia is more prevalent in older
people
Leukemia
Immature WBCs are found in the bloodstream
in all leukemias
Bone marrow becomes totally occupied with
cancerous leukocytes
The WBCs produced, though numerous, are
not functional
Death is caused by internal hemorrhage and
overwhelming infections
Treatments include irradiation, antileukemic
drugs, and bone marrow transplants
Platelets
Platelets are fragments of megakaryocytes
with a blue-staining outer region and a purple
granular center
Their granules contain serotonin, Ca2+,
enzymes, ADP, and platelet-derived growth
factor (PDGF)
Platelets function in the clotting mechanism by
forming a temporary plug that helps seal
breaks in blood vessels
Platelets not involved in clotting are kept
inactive by NO and prostacyclin
Genesis of Platelets
The stem cell for platelets is the
hemocytoblast
The sequential developmental pathway is
as shown.
Stem cell
Hemocytoblast
Developmental pathway
Megakaryoblast
Promegakaryocyte
Megakaryocyte
Platelets
Hemostasis
A series of reactions for stoppage of
bleeding
During hemostasis, three phases occur in
rapid sequence
spasms – immediate
vasoconstriction in response to injury
Platelet plug formation
Coagulation (blood clotting)
Vascular
Hemostasis
Vascular spasms because of:
Direct
injury to the smooth muscle layer of
the blood vessel
Chemicals released by the platelet and
endothelial cells
Reflexes initiated by local pain receptors
Hemostasis
Platelet Plug Formation
Platelets do not stick to each other or to blood
vessels in normal conditions
Upon damage to blood vessel endothelium the
exposed collagen will cause platelets to swell
and become sticky :
With the help of von Willebrand factor (VWF)
secreted by the endothelial cells .
Stick to exposed collagen fibers and form a
platelet plug
Hemostasis
Release
serotonin and ADP, which attract
still more platelets and promote vascular
spam
Release thromboxane A2 that promotes
further platelet aggregation
The platelet plug is limited to the immediate
area of injury by prostacyclin secreted by
endothelial cells
Hemostasis
Coagulation
A set of reactions in which blood is
transformed from a liquid to a gel
Coagulation follows intrinsic and extrinsic
pathways
Coagulation
67
Detailed Events of Coagulation
Coagulation
May be initiated by either the intrinsic or
extrinsic pathway
Triggered by tissue-damaging events
Involves a series of procoagulants
Each pathway cascades toward factor X
Coagulation
Prothrombin is transformed into thrombin
Thrombin converts fibrinogen into fibrin
Fibrin becomes part of the clot
It causes plasma to become a gel-like trap
Clot Retraction and Repair
Clot retraction – stabilization of the clot by
squeezing serum from the fibrin strands
Restoration of the blood vessel wall
Platelet
will stimulate
smooth muscle cells mitosis
fibroblast multiplication
endothelial cells division
Fibrinolysis
The process of removal of clots after healing
has occurred
Plasminogen is activated by
Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)
released by many tissues
Thrombin
Plasminogen is converted into plasmin
Plasmin will then digest the clot
Factors Limiting Clot Growth or
Formation
Two homeostatic mechanisms prevent clots
from becoming large
Blood flow
Wash away activated clotting factors
Hinder further grow of forming clot
Factors Limiting Clot Growth or
Formation
Mechanisms
that prevents thrombin
action
Fibrin binds thrombin preventing its:
Positive feedback effects of
coagulation
Fast inactivation of thrombin that escapes
into blood circulation by:
Antithrombin III
Prevention of clotting in the normal
vascular system
The presence of a smooth and intact
endothelial surface
The presence of circulating antithrombin
factors
Antithrombin
III
also inhibits steps of the intrinsic pathway
Protein C
inhibits steps of the intrinsic pathway
Prevention of clotting in the
normal vascular system
Heparin
increases the action of antithrombin III
Vitamin E
a potent anticoagulant
Hemostasis Disorders:
Thromboembolytic Conditions
Thrombus – a clot that develops and
persists in an unbroken blood vessel
Thrombi
can block circulation, resulting in
tissue death
Coronary thrombosis – thrombus in blood
vessel of the heart
Hemostasis Disorders:
Thromboembolytic Conditions
Embolus – a thrombus freely floating in the
blood stream
Pulmonary
emboli can impair the ability of
the body to obtain oxygen
Cerebral emboli can cause strokes
Prevention of Undesirable Clots
Substances used to prevent undesirable
clots:
– an antiprostaglandin that inhibits
thromboxane A2
Heparin – an anticoagulant used clinically
for pre- and postoperative cardiac care
Warfarin – competes with vitamin K in the
production of some procoagulants
Aspirin
Hemostasis Disorders
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation
(DIC): widespread clotting in intact blood
vessels
Residual blood cannot clot
Blockage of blood flow and severe
bleeding follows
Most common as:
A
complication of pregnancy
A result of septicemia or incompatible blood
transfusions
Hemostasis Disorders: Bleeding
Disorders
Thrombocytopenia – condition where the
number of circulating platelets is deficient
Patients
show petechiae due to
spontaneous, widespread hemorrhage
Caused by suppression or destruction of
bone marrow (e.g., malignancy, radiation)
Platelet counts less than 50,000/mm3 is
diagnostic for this condition
Treated with whole blood transfusions
Hemostasis Disorders: Bleeding
Disorders
Inability to synthesize procoagulants by the
liver results in severe bleeding disorders
Causes can range from vitamin K deficiency to
hepatitis and cirrhosis
Inability to absorb fat can lead to vitamin K
deficiencies as it is a fat-soluble substance and
is absorbed along with fat
Liver disease can also prevent the liver from
producing bile, which is required for fat and
vitamin K absorption
Hemostasis Disorders: Bleeding
Disorders
Hemophilias – hereditary bleeding
disorders caused by lack of clotting factors
A – most common type (83% of
all cases) due to a deficiency of factor VIII
Hemophilia B – due to a deficiency of factor
IX
Hemophilia C – mild type, due to a
deficiency of factor XI
Hemophilia
Hemostasis Disorders: Bleeding
Disorders
Symptoms include prolonged bleeding and
painful and disabled joints
Treatment is with blood transfusions and
the injection of missing factors
Blood Transfusions
Whole blood transfusions are used:
When
blood loss is substantial
In treating thrombocytopenia
Packed red cells (cells with plasma
removed) are used to treat anemia
Human Blood Groups
RBC membranes have glycoprotein
antigens on their external surfaces
These antigens are:
Unique
to the individual
Recognized as foreign if transfused into
another individual
Promoters of agglutination and are referred
to as agglutinogens
Presence or absence of these antigens is
used to classify blood groups
Blood Groups
Humans have 30 varieties of naturally
occurring RBC antigens
The antigens of the ABO and Rh blood
groups cause vigorous transfusion
reactions when they are improperly
transfused
Other blood groups (M, N, Dufy, Kell, and
Lewis) are mainly used for legalities
ABO Blood Groups
The ABO blood groups consists of:
Two
antigens (A and B) on the surface of the
RBCs
Two antibodies in the plasma (anti-A and
anti-B)
ABO blood groups may have various types
of antigens and preformed antibodies
Agglutinogens and their corresponding
antibodies cannot be mixed without
serious hemolytic reactions
ABO Blood Groups
Rh Blood Groups
There are eight different Rh agglutinogens,
three of which (C, D, and E) are common
Presence of the Rh agglutinogens on
RBCs is indicated as Rh+
Anti-Rh antibodies are not spontaneously
formed in Rh– individuals
However, if an Rh– individual receives Rh+
blood, anti-Rh antibodies form
A second exposure to Rh+ blood will result
in a typical transfusion reaction
Hemolytic Disease of the
Newborn
Hemolytic disease of the newborn – Rh+
antibodies of a sensitized Rh– mother
cross the placenta and attack and destroy
the RBCs of an Rh+ baby
Rh– mother becomes sensitized when
exposure to Rh+ blood causes her body to
synthesize Rh+ antibodies
Hemolytic Disease of the
Newborn
The drug RhoGAM can prevent the Rh–
mother from becoming sensitized
Treatment of hemolytic disease of the
newborn involves pre-birth transfusions
and exchange transfusions after birth
Transfusion Reactions
Transfusion reactions occur when
mismatched blood is infused
Donor’s cells are attacked by the
recipient’s plasma agglutinins causing:
Diminished
oxygen-carrying capacity
Clumped cells that impede blood flow
Ruptured RBCs that release free
hemoglobin into the bloodstream
Transfusion Reactions
Circulating hemoglobin precipitates in the
kidneys and causes renal failure
Blood Typing
When serum containing anti-A or anti-B
agglutinins is added to blood, agglutination
will occur between the agglutinin and the
corresponding agglutinogens
Positive reactions indicate agglutination
Blood Typing
Blood type being
tested
RBC agglutinogens
Serum Reaction
Anti-A
Anti-B
AB
A and B
+
+
B
B
–
+
A
A
+
–
O
None
–
–
Plasma Volume Expanders
When shock is imminent from low blood
volume, volume must be replaced
Plasma or plasma expanders can be
administered
Plasma Volume Expanders
Plasma expanders
Have
osmotic properties that directly
increase fluid volume
Are used when plasma is not available
Examples: purified human serum albumin,
plasminate, and dextran
Isotonic saline can also be used to replace
lost blood volume
Diagnostic Blood Tests
Laboratory examination of blood can
assess an individual’s state of health
Microscopic examination:
in size and shape of RBCs –
predictions of anemias
Type and number of WBCs – diagnostic of
various diseases
Variations
Chemical analysis can provide a
comprehensive picture of one’s general
health status in relation to normal values
Developmental Aspects
Before birth, blood cell formation takes
place in the fetal yolk sac, liver, and
spleen
By the seventh month, red bone marrow is
the primary hematopoietic area
Blood cells develop from mesenchymal
cells called blood islands
The fetus forms HbF, which has a higher
affinity for oxygen than adult hemoglobin
Developmental Aspects
Age-related blood problems result from
disorders of the heart, blood vessels, and
the immune system
Increased leukemias are thought to be due
to the waning deficiency of the immune
system
Abnormal thrombus and embolus
formation reflects the progress of
atherosclerosis