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Blood

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Question
Answer
What are the two key components of whole blood?   Blood Plasma and Formed elements  
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What are the 3 main components of Blood Plasma?   Water,proteins and solutes  
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What are the three main proteins found in blood?   Albumins, Globulins and fibrogen  
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What are the 6 solutes found in blood?   Electrolytes,nutrients,gases,regulatory substances, vitamins and water products.  
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what are formed elements?   They are cells and cell fragments.  
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what are the three classes of formed elements?   Platelets,white blood cells and red blood cells.  
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What are the five clsses of white blood cells?   Neutrophils,lymphocytes,monocytes, eosinophils, and basophils.  
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What is the relationship of erythrocyte and erythropoiesis?   An erythrocyte is an actual red blood cell that carries oxygen and an erythropoiesis is the FORMATION of red blood cells.  
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What is the relationship of red blood cells and reticulocytes?   A reticulocyte is an immature red blood cell, they both carry oxygen  
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What is the function of a neutrophils?   It is a white blood cell that destroys invading bacteria done by phagocytosis  
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What is the function of a monocytes?   The same as a neutrophil, it kills invading bacteria by phagocytosis  
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What is the function of eosinophils?   They are white blood cells that kill parasites, destroys cancer calls and are involved in allegergic responses.  
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What is the function of basophils?   is a white blood cell that increases inflammation in the tissues.  
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What is the role of B,T and natural killer cells?   They all are part of the immune system. B-cells produce antibodies that help destroy bacteria. T-cells attack viruses.and natural killers attack a variety of infectious microbes.  
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What is hemostasis?   a sequence of responses that stops bleeding when blood vessels are injured.  
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What are the three methods of reduction of blood loss?   The three methods are vascular spasm, platelet plug and clotting.  
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What is a hemorrhage?   The loss of a large amount of blood from the vessels  
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what does vascular spasm aid in hemostasis?   It reduces blood loss for a couple minutes and then hemostatic mechanism begins to operate.  
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How does the platelet plug help in hemostasis?   when bleeding occurs the platelets come together to make a plug that helps fill the gap of the injured blood vessels.  
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How does clotting help in hemostasis?   It forms a gel to reduce the bleeding.  
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The difference between Thrombus and an embolus is   A thombus is the actual blood clot, it can dissolve. An embolus is a clot that transported by the blood stream.  
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What is a pulomonary embolism and why is it dangerous?   when an embolus becomes lodged is in the lungs,it can result in right ventricular failure and death in a few minutes or hours.  
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What makes one blood group different than the other?   Based on the presence or absense of isoantiigens.  
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How is type A blood different from Type B ?   Type A blood has only type A antigens and makes antibodies against other types besides O and A . Type B blood has B antigens and make antibodies against the rest except O and B.  
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How is type AB blood different from types A and B blood?   It has Both A and B antigens.  
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What does an A antibody do? What does a B antibody do?   A antibody reacts with antigen A. And B antibodies react with B antigens.  
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Who has an A antibody who does not?   Type A blood has antibody A as well as AB blood. but the rest of the blood type do not.  
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Who has B antibody who does not?   Type B blood have B antibodies as well as type AB. The rest do not.  
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What happens in an uncompatible blood transfusion?   antibodies in the persons plasma bind to the antigens on the donated red blood cells.  
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What is the difference of Rh+ and Rh- blood?   Rh+ stand for a person that has the blood of the monkey rhesus.Rh- is the lack of rhesus monley in us.  
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What is Anemia and what are the symptoms of it?   Condition in which oxygen-carrying capacity of blood is reduced. Fatigueness, intolerent to the cold, and skin appears pale are some of the symptoms.  
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What is the cause of iron-deficiency anemia?   inadequate absorption of iron,excessive lossor iron, or insuffient intake or iron.  
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What is the cause of pemicious anemia?   Insuffient hemopoesis resulting from an inability of the stomach to produce intrinstic factor needed to absorbof vitamin B.  
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What is the cause of hemorrhagic anemia?   excessive loss of red blood cells through bleeding from large wounds, stomach ulcers and heavy menstrual cycles.  
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What is the cause of thalassemia?   abnormality in one or more of the four polypeptide chains of the hemoglobin molecule.  
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What is the cause of hemolytic anemia?   Red blood cell plasma membranes rupture too soon.  
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What is the cause of aplastic anemia?   destruction of the red bone marrow caused by toxins, gamma radiation, and medication that inhibit enzymes needed for hemopoesis.  
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What is the cause and symptoms of sickle cell anemia?   Hemoglobin S gives up oxygen to the interstitual fluid, it forms long stiff, rodlike structures that bend the red blood cells into a sickle shape, they rupture easily. Symptoms is difficult breathing.  
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What is the cause and symptoms of hemophilia?   deficiency of clotting where bleeding is spontanous of after minor trauma. Symptoms: nosebleeds, blood in urine and hemorrhages in joints produce pain and tissue damage.  
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what is the symptoms and cause of luekemia?   disease of blood- functioning tissue chacterized by uncontrolled production and accumulation of immature leukocytes. symptoms: weakness, fatigueness, and get sick easily.  
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What is an reticylocyte?   counting the volume of reticylocytes in blood measures the rate of red blood cells.  
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what is Hematocrit?   the percentage of blood that is made up of red blood cells.  
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what is differential white blood cell count?   counts different forms of white blood cells to assees for diseases.  
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what is a cbc?   it measures the volume of blood components. and componets that are out of range.  
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emia?   blood condition  
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Erythro?   red  
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Gluco?   sugar  
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Glyco?   sugar,sweet  
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hemo,hemato?   blood,hemorrhage  
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rrhagia?   hemorrhage, excessive discharge  
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phlebo?   vein  
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thrombo?   blood clot.  
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