Lecture 17 - Hematology
Lecture 17 - Hematology
Lecture 17 - Hematology
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Basic scheme
Blood leaves the heart in
arteries
Branching of arteries until
they become tiny capillaries
Oxygen and nutrients diffuse out
CO2 and wastes diffuse in
Capillaries form veins going to the heart
The blood leaves the right side of the heart for
the lungs to pick up O2 and release CO2
Blood goes back to the left side of the heart to
start all over
Note: vessels going to the heart are veins; those leaving the heart are arteries 2
Composition of blood
Specialized connective tissue
Blood cells (formed elements) suspended in
plasma
Blood is
examined in a
“smear”
Smears are
stained
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Light microscope
Hematopoiesis
Formation of blood cells
Occurs mostly in red bone marrow
All cells arise from same blood stem cell
(pluripotent hematopoietic stem cells)
Recently some have been found in adults
which are mesenchymal stem cells,
which can also form fat cells, osteoblasts,
chondrocytes, fibroblasts and muscle cells
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Blood stem cells divide into:
1.myeloid stem cells or
2.lymphoid stem cells
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CBC is probably commonest test done
(“complete blood count”-how much of each type of cell)
Hemoglobin (gm/dl)
usually 15
Hematocrit (%)
RBC count
WBC in thousands/cumm
Differential if ordered:
broken down to amount of
each type WBC
Platelet count in
thousands/cumm
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Erythrocytes
Also called RBCs or red blood
cells
Biconcave discs and flexible
Plasma membrane but no
nuclei or organelles
Packed with hemoglobin
molecules
Oxygen carrying protein
4 chains of amino acids, each
with iron which is binding site forheme
oxygen; CO2 carried also
Young ones still containing iron atom
AKA WBCs:
white blood
cells
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__RBC
Leukocytes
neutrophil eosinophil AKA WBCs: white
blood cells
Are complete cells
Function outside
the blood
basophil
Note the size
difference compared
to erythrocytes
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Remember this slide?
See the artificial division?
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Eosinophils
1-4 % of leukocytes
Bilobed
Granules have digestive enzymes
Role in ending allergic reactions and in
fighting parasitic infections
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Basophils
Rarest WBC
Bilobed nucleus
Dark purple granules
Later stages of reaction to allergies and
parasitic infections
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Lymphocytes*
Most important
WBC
20-45%
Most are
enmeshed in
lymphoid
connective
tissue, e.g.
lymph nodes,
tonsils, spleen
*
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Lymphocytes:
nucleus occupies most of
the cell volume
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B cells
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Monocytes*
4-8% of WBCs
In connective
tissue they
transform into
macrophages
(phagocytic cells
with pseudopods)
*
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Platelets*
Not cells
Small fragments
broken off from
megakaryocytes
Important in
forming clots in
damaged vessels
AKA
* thrombocytes
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Clots
Platelet__________________
Undesirable clots:
Thrombus
Platelet and several RBCs trapped
Embolus in a fibrin mesh
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Significant
young cells
Reticulocytes*
(young erythrocytes):
1-2%of all RBCs
“retic count” helps
determine if producing
RBCs at accelerated
rate (anemia, move to
a high climate, etc.)
Bands* (young
* neutrophils): 1-2% of
all WBCs
* Increases with acute
bacterial infections
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Disorders of Erythrocytes
Polycythemia: too many cells
Anemia: not enough cells
Sickle cell disease: genetic disease AR
1/400 African Americans
Defect in hemoglobin
Plus many others
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Disorders of Leukocytes
Leukemia: too many, abnormal, crowd out
normal marrow
Classified into
Lymphoblastic or myeloblastic
Acute or chronic
Disorders of Platelets
Thrombocytopenia
Causes internal bleeding
Many causes
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Laboratory
CBC: complete blood count (to review…)
Hemoglobin (gm/dl)
Hematocrit (%)
RBC count
WBC in thousands/cumm
Differential if ordered: broken down to amount of each
type WBC
Platelet count in thousands/cumm
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Laboratory continued
Clotting: “coags”
for preop evaluation (before surgery)
to evaluate effectiveness of anticoagulant drugs, e.g.
aspirin, heparin, coumadin
Bleeding time
PT - Protime
PTT - Partial thromboplastin time
INR
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If a blood transfusion is given to a person
who has antibodies to that type of blood,
then the transfused blood will be attacked
and destroyed (transfusion reaction)
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ABO blood group types
The blood types are “codominant” – i.e. if genotype is AB, then you have
both A and B antigens on your RBCs
Blood Antigen on Antibodies in Can receive blood from: Can donate blood to Frequency
type rbc blood (usually RBCs only): in US
A A anti-B A A 40%
O AB
not B (you have anti-B) *
not AB (you have anti-B) *
B B anti-A B B 10%
O (no Ags so you won’t reject) AB
not A (you have anti-A) *
not AB (you have anti-A) *
AB A and B none to AB AB is universal recipient AB 4%
A or B A
B
O
http://wikiparenting.parentsconnect.com/wiki/Rhogam_in_pregnancy
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FYI
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