Composition of Blood and Cellular Elements: Learning Objectives
Composition of Blood and Cellular Elements: Learning Objectives
Composition of Blood and Cellular Elements: Learning Objectives
And
Cellular elements
LEARNING OBJECTIVES:
By the end of the lecture, the student should be able to :
Composition of blood
Functions of blood.
Plasma and it’s composition.
RBCs: Their structure, function and count.
WBCs: Their types, structure, function and count.
Platelets: Their structure, function and count.
Blood
Composition:
Formed elements:
Cells.
Plasma:
Fluid.
Plasma
90% water
10% solutes
Ions, e.g., Na+, Cl-, Ca++
Nutrients, e.g., simple sugars, amino acids, lipids
Wastes, e.g., urea, ammonia, CO2
Miscellaneous: O2, hormones, vitamins, plasma proteins.
Serum
If whole blood is allowed to clot
and the clot is removed, the
remaining fluid is called serum.
Formed elements
RBCs (erythrocytes)
WBCs (leukocytes)
Granulocytes
Agranulocytes
Blood smear
Light microscope
Stained
Key Note
Red blood cells (RBCs) are:
most numerous cells in the body.
circulate for about four months before being recycled;
millions are produced each second.
hemoglobin inside transports oxygen from the lungs to peripheral tissues and carbon dioxide from
the tissues to the lungs.
Erythrocytes
Structure
Each human red blood cell is about
7-8 µ m diameter.
2 µ m thick
Biconcave disc shape
surface area
Plasma membrane
Cytoplasm
Hemoglobin.
No nucleus or organelles.
Erythrocytes
Flexible
Elastic
100-120 day life span
Originate in bone marrow.
The average normal red blood cell count is:
5.4 million/ L in men and 4.8 million/ L in women.
Regulation of RBCs
Properties of RBCs
Transport oxygen and carbon dioxide in blood stream.
Leukocytes (WBCs)
Part of defense system
Protect against bacteria, viruses, parasites
Attracted to sites of infection
Diapedesis: leave capillary by squeezing between endothelial cells
Ameboid movement
Travel toward infection
Exhibit chemotaxis—Move toward specific chemicals released by bacteria or injured cells
Neutrophils
60% of WBCs
Lobed nucleus
Light staining granules
Digestive enzymes
Function
Phagocytize & destroy bacteria
First cells to respond to infection
Secrete antibacterial chemicals
Phagocytize & digest bacteria
Eosinophils
1-4% of WBCs
Lobed nucleus
Eosin-staining granules
Phagocytize allergen-Ab complexes.
Secrete antihistamine
Attack parasites
Basophils
0.5% of WBCs
Lobed nucleus
Large granules stained dark purple
Granules
Histamine – creates inflammation in allergic reaction
Lymphocytes
Agranulocyte
20-45% of WBCs
Spherical, dark-staining nucleus
Thin rim of blue staining cytoplasm
Each lymphocyte recognizes and acts against a specific antigen
Lymphocytes
T lymphocytes can attack foreign cells directly.
Lymphocytes
B lymphocytes transform into plasma cells and secrete antibodies.
Monocytes
Agranulocyte
4-8% of WBCs
Horseshoe shaped nucleus
Grey-blue stained cytoplasm
Become wandering macrophages after diapedesis
Platelets
(thrombocytes)
Fragments of megakaryocytes in bone marrow
Attracted to hemorrhage
Plugs leaks
Promotes constriction of blood vessel
Triggers inflammation
Initiates clotting reaction
Platelets
SEM of a clot with platelet, fibrin mesh, rbc’s
Hematopoiesis
Disorders of platelets
Thrombocytopenia
Abnormally low concentration of platelets
References
Textbook of Medical Physiology.
Eleventh Edition.
Guyton & Hall.
Stem
cells
Erythroblasts
Reticulocytes
Increased
mitotic rate
Accelerated
maturation
Release of
erythropoietin
(EPO)
Tissue
oxygen
levels
decline
Tissue
oxygen
levels
rise
Improved
oxygen
content
of blood
Increased numbers
of circulating RBCs