Haematology

Cards (46)

  • What are the main components of blood?
    Plasma, RBC, WBC, Platelets
  • What percentage of body weight does blood constitute?
    8%
  • What is the protein composition of plasma?
    7% proteins including albumins, globulins, fibrinogen
  • What is the percentage of albumins in plasma proteins?
    57-60%
  • What is the percentage of globulins in plasma proteins?
    38%
  • What is the percentage of fibrinogen in plasma proteins?
    4%
  • What is the water composition of plasma?
    92% water
  • What are the formed elements in blood?
    Platelets, erythrocytes, leukocytes
  • What is the normal range of platelets per cubic mm?
    140-340,000
  • What is the normal range of erythrocytes per cubic mm?
    4.2-6.2 million
  • What is the normal range of leukocytes per cubic mm?
    5-10,000
  • What is the first line of defense in leukocytes?
    Neutrophils 40-60%
  • What percentage of lymphocytes are B+T cells?
    20-40%
  • What is the percentage of monocytes in leukocytes?
    2-8%
  • What is the percentage of eosinophils in leukocytes?
    2-4%
  • What is the percentage of basophils in leukocytes?
    0.5-1%
  • What is haematopoiesis?
    Production of blood cells in bone marrow
  • What are the types of stem cells involved in blood cell production?
    Myeloid stem cells, lymphoid stem cells
  • What is the function of RBCs?
    Measure blood's oxygen capacity
  • Why do RBCs have a concave shape?
    To provide a larger surface area
  • How long do RBCs last in circulation?
    Last 3 months
  • Where are RBCs destroyed?
    In the liver by macrophages
  • What happens to hemoglobin when RBCs are digested?
    It breaks down into globin and heme
  • What is produced from the breakdown of heme?
    Iron and biliverdin
  • What happens to bilirubin after its formation?
    Bilirubin is excreted
  • What is the structure of hemoglobin?
    Made of 4 globin chains, each with heme
  • How many alpha and beta chains are in hemoglobin?
    2 alpha and 2 beta chains
  • What gives hemoglobin its red color?
    Iron in the heme molecule
  • What are the main proteins found in plasma?
    • Albumins
    • Globulins
    • Fibrinogen
  • What are the steps of haemostasis?
    1. Blood vessel spasm (vasospasm)
    2. Platelet plug formation
    3. Blood coagulation
  • What triggers platelet plug formation?
    Exposed collagen fibers
  • What is the duration of vasospasm?
    Lasts 30 minutes
  • What are the two pathways of blood coagulation?
    • Intrinsic pathway: exposure to collagen
    • Extrinsic pathway: triggered by tissue factor
  • What is the role of factor 10 in coagulation?
    Activates prothrombin to thrombin
  • What does thrombin convert fibrinogen into?
    Fibrin, which forms a mesh
  • What is the purpose of negative feedback in clotting?
    To prevent excessive clotting
  • What are the blood groups and their antigens?
    • A: A antigen
    • B: B antigen
    • O: No antigens
    • AB: A and B antigens
  • What antibodies are present in blood group A?
    Anti-B antibodies
  • Which blood group can give to anyone?
    Type O
  • Which blood group can receive any blood type?
    Type AB