Blood (FINAL) Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Blood (FINAL) Deck (83)
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1
Q

What is the general role of blood?

A

Blood is a transport agent

2
Q

What type of things does blood transport around the body?

A
  1. Gases (O2, CO2)
  2. Nutrients
  3. Hormones
  4. Waste
3
Q

What are the four components that make up blood?

A
  1. Plasma
  2. Leukocytes (WBC’s)
  3. Erythrocytes (RBC’s)
  4. Platelets
4
Q

Which of the componets of blood are made in the bone marrow?

A
  1. Leukocytes (WBC’s)
  2. Erythrocytes (RBC’s)
  3. Platelets
5
Q

What are hemocytoblasts?

A

Blood cell maker (stem cell)

6
Q

Which of the component(s) of the blood does diet aid in its formation?

A

Erythrocytes (RBC’s)

Needs iron (Fe2+)

7
Q

What is the function of plasma?

A

Plasma is a liquid that transports:

  1. Hormonnes
  2. Glucose
  3. Wastes
  4. Everything els
8
Q

What organ(s) detects O2 in the body?

A
  • Liver
  • Kidney
9
Q

When there is too much O2 in the body what increases in order for the number of RBCs to decrease?

A

Decrease in EPO (Erythropoietin) = Decrease in RBCs

10
Q

When there is too little O2 in the body what increases in order for the number of RBCs to increase?

A

Increase in EPO (Erythropoietin) = Increase in RBCs

11
Q

What is the general function of leukocytes (WBCs)?

A

Immunity

12
Q

What is the general purpose of erythrocytes (RBCs)?

A

Carries O2

13
Q

What is the general function of platelets?

A

Clotting

14
Q

What are the 8 steps of processing old RBCs?

A
  1. Old RBCs last 6 weeks
  2. Sent to the liver
  3. The liver takes the hemoglobin out of the old RBCs
  4. The iron from the hemoglobin is sent to the bone marrow
  5. Everything else except the hemoglobin is turned into bilirubin
  6. Bilirubin is turned into bile
  7. The bile is sent through the small intestines
  8. Eventually takes it to the toilet (waste)
15
Q

How long do RBCs last?

A

~6 weeks

16
Q

What organ does old RBCs get sent to?

A

The liver

17
Q

What does the liver do to the old RBC’s

A

Takes the hemoglobin (Fe carring protein) out of the old RBCs

18
Q

Where is the Fe2+ (iron) sent to after the liver is done processing the hemoglobin?

A

To the bone marrow

19
Q

What does the liver turn “everything else” that is not hemoglobin from the old RBCs?

A

To bilirubin

20
Q

What is bilirubin?

(Besides the name Dr. Lector gave the senator of Buffola Bill)

A

The waste product of the breaking down of old RBC in the liver

21
Q

Which organ produces bilirubin?

A

Liver

22
Q

What condition is the result of excess bilirubin in the body?

A

Jaundice

23
Q

After the liver has turned parts of the old RBCs into bilirubin, it is then turned into what?

A

Bile

24
Q

Bile goes through what organ to be eventually expelled in the toilet as waste?

A

Small intestines

25
Q
A
26
Q

What type of blood can a patient get with type A?

A

Type A & O

27
Q

What type of blood can a patient get with type AB?

A

Types A, B, AB, & O

28
Q

What type of blood can a patient get with type B?

A

Type B & O

29
Q

What type of blood can a patient get with type O?

A

Type O

30
Q

Which blood type is a universal donor?

A

Type O

31
Q

Which blood type is the universal recipient?

A

Type AB

32
Q

A blood donor has type A blood, who can the donor give blood to?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • A
  • AB
33
Q

A blood donor has type B blood, who can the donor give blood to?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • B
  • AB
34
Q

A blood donor has type AB blood, who can the donor give blood to?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • AB
35
Q

A blood donor has type O blood, who can the donor give blood to?

A

Repicients with blood types:

  • A
  • AB
  • B
  • O
36
Q

What is agglutination?

A

When you mix different blood types together resulting in the RBCs clumping together (part of an immune response) like cottage cheese

37
Q

What does it mean when blood is Rh+?

A

The RBC has the Rh antigen

38
Q

at does it mean when blood is Rh-?

A

The RBC does NOT have the Rh antigen

39
Q

What is an antibody?

A

Immune cells

40
Q

If a patient with blood type A+ needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood types donors are:

  • A+
  • A-
  • O+
  • O-
41
Q

If a patient with blood type A- needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • A-
  • O-
42
Q

If a patient with blood type AB+ needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • A+
  • A-
  • AB+
  • AB-
  • B+
  • B-
  • O+
  • O-
43
Q

If a patient with blood type AB- needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • A-
  • B-
  • AB-
  • O-
44
Q

If a patient with blood type B+ needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • B+
  • B-
  • O+
  • O-
45
Q

If a patient with blood type B+ needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • B+
  • B-
  • O+
  • O-
46
Q

If a patient with blood type B- needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • B-
  • O-
47
Q

If a patient with blood type O+ needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • O+
  • O-
48
Q

If a patient with blood type O- needs a blood transfusion, who can be the donor?

A

Blood type donors:

  • O-
49
Q

What blood type with Rh group is the universal donor?

A

Type O-

50
Q

What blood type with Rh group is the universal recipient?

A

Type AB+

51
Q

A person with type A+ blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • A+
  • AB+
52
Q

A person with type A- blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • A-
  • AB+
  • AB-
53
Q

A person with type AB+ blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood type:

  • AB+
54
Q

A person with type AB- blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • AB+
  • AB-
55
Q

A person with type B+ blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • B+
  • AB+
56
Q

A person with type AB- blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • AB+
  • AB-
57
Q

A person with type O+ blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • A+
  • AB+
  • B+
  • O+
58
Q

A person with type O- blood wants to donate blood. Who can be the recipients of their blood?

A

Recipients with blood types:

  • A+
  • A-
  • AB+
  • AB-
  • B+
  • B-
  • O+
  • O-
59
Q

The process of blood clotting is an example of negative or postive feedback?

A

Positve feedback

As clotting gets under way, each step releases chemicals that accelerate the process. This escalating process is a positive feedbackloop that ends with the formation of a blood clot, which patches the vessel wall and stops the bleeding.

60
Q

What are the first three steps in blood clotting after you cut yourself?

A
  1. The blood vessel spasms to become smaller
  2. Platelets plug to cork the wound
  3. The blood clotting process
61
Q

What is the purpose of the blood vessel spasming in the blood clotting process?

A

To make the blood vessel smaller thus causing less blood flow

62
Q

The platelet plug causes the formation of what?

A

A scab

63
Q

The blood clotting pathways consists of what two different routes (pathways)?

A
  1. Intrinsic Pathway
  2. Extrinsic Pathway
64
Q

What is the location in the blood clotting process for the intrinsic pathway?

A

Intrinsic = within the blood vessels

65
Q

What is the location in the blood clotting process for the extrinsic pathway?

A

Extrinsic = tissue damage (outside of the blood vessel)

66
Q

What is the order of clotthing factors for the intrinsic pathway?

A

Factor XII→Factor XI→Factor IX (with Factor VIII) →Factor X

67
Q

What is the order of clotthing factors for the extrinsic pathway?

A

Tissue Factor (TF) III → (with Factor VII) ⇒ Factor X

68
Q

Which blood clotting factor begins the common pathway?

A

Factor X

69
Q

Which clotting factor begins the intrinsic pathway?

A

Factor XII

70
Q

Which clotting factor begins the extrinsic pathway?

A

Tissue Factor (TF) III

71
Q

Tissue Factor III with what other factor begins the common pathway for what pathway?

A

Tissue factor (TF) III pairs with Factor VII in the extrinsic pathway

72
Q

Factor XII turns on what bloot clotting factor? Which pathway?

A

Factor XI

Intrinsic pathway

73
Q

Factor XI turns on what bloot clotting factor? Which pathway?

A

Factor IX

Intrinsic pathway

74
Q

What two blood clotting factors in the instrinsic pathway turn on the common pathway?

A
  • Factor IX
  • Factor VIII
75
Q

The intrinsic and extrinsic pathways have what in common?

A

Both end in Factor X and have the common pathway

76
Q

What is the starting factor in the common pathway?

A

Factor X

77
Q

Factor X pairs up with what factor to turn on Factor II?

A

Factor V

78
Q

What is another name for thrombin?

A

Factor V

79
Q

What is another name for Factor V?

A

Thrombin

80
Q

Factor II leads to what factor of what pathway?

A

Factor I (Fibrin)

Common pathway

81
Q

What is another name for Factor I of what pathway?

A

Fibrin

Common pathway

82
Q

What is another name of Fibrin of what pathway?

A

Factor I

Common pathway

83
Q

Factor I leads to the final step which is the formation of what?

A

A clot