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Hbioana Le3

The cardiovascular system transports materials throughout the body via blood. Blood is composed of cellular elements like red blood cells, which carry oxygen, and white blood cells, which help fight infection. It also contains plasma and circulates within a network of blood vessels and the heart. Hematopoiesis, the formation of blood cells, occurs within bone marrow and involves stem cells that differentiate into various blood cell types through growth factors. These blood cells have specific roles like carrying oxygen or defending the body.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

Hbioana Le3

The cardiovascular system transports materials throughout the body via blood. Blood is composed of cellular elements like red blood cells, which carry oxygen, and white blood cells, which help fight infection. It also contains plasma and circulates within a network of blood vessels and the heart. Hematopoiesis, the formation of blood cells, occurs within bone marrow and involves stem cells that differentiate into various blood cell types through growth factors. These blood cells have specific roles like carrying oxygen or defending the body.

Uploaded by

bitangyarah
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM

 Transports materials (such as oxygen from COMPOSITION OF BLOOD


the lungs, nutrients from the digestive  Normal hematocrit values of erythrocytes
system, hormones from glands of the o Females – 37% - 47%
endocrine system, and waste materials from o Males – 42% - 52%
cells) to and from all the cells of the body *hematocrit – total volume of red blood cell
 Classified under a specialized type of  Why mas mababa ang females?
connective tissue: o Because of testosterone in males
o Fluid-type o Because of the monthly period in
 Dynamic and connects the females
organs together  Percentage of other formed elements (WBCs
 The transport of these materials is necessary and platelets) is extremely small
to maintain homeostasis of the body + o Not normally considered with the
hormones hematocrit
o Hormones in the endocrine system  Mean plasma percentage
are transported intravascularly o The percent of blood that is not
 Main components erythrocytes
o Heart o 92% water
o Blood vessels o 7% plasma proteins
o Blood  Albumin – most abundant of
the plasma proteins
BLOOD  Central component
 Made up of cellular elements and an for osmotic pressure
extracellular matrix  If may kidney
 Cellular elements damage, albumin ay
o Red blood cells or erythrocytes masasama sa urine.
 Distribute oxygen Albumin in the soft
o White blood cells or leukocytes tissue will decrease
o Platelets or thrombocytes (less than the abumin
 For coagulation mechanism in the extracellular
 Produce a fibrous net called space)  pupunta
fibrin to lessen the leakage of water sa soft tissue,
blood from the injured tissue cause edema
 Extracellular matrix, consisting of:
o Plasma CHARACTERISTICS OF BLOOD
o Mostly water, suspends the formed  Color
elements and enables them to o Oxygenated blood
circulate throughout the body within  Bright red
the cardiovascular system  Galing arteries
 Functions: o Deoxygenated blood
o To deliver oxygen and nutrients to,  Darker red
and remove wastes from, the body  Galing veins
cells o Differs due to hemoglobin that
o Other functions also include: changes color depending on the
 Immune defense degree of oxygen saturation
 Distribution of heat  Viscosity
 Maintenance of homeostasis o Blood viscosity is approximately 5x
greater than water
o It is influenced by the presence of  Give rise to lymphocytes,
the plasma proteins and formed which function in immunity
elements within the blood  Include T cells, B cells, and
 pH of blood NKT
o averages about 7.4 (range: 7.35 –  Quickly migrate from the
7.45) bone marrow to lymphatic
o blood contains numerous buffers tissues where the production
that help regulate the pH and differentiation occurs
 Volume o Myeloid stem cells
o Adult males typically have about 5-6  Gives rise to all the other
liters of blood, and females have 4-5 formed elements
liters  Including the erythrocytes;
HEMATOPOIESIS (OR HEMOPOIESIS) megakaryocytes (platelets);
 Occurs in the red marrow within the spaces monocytes and granular
of spongy (cancellous) bone tissue leukocytes; neutrophils,
 In children: can occur in the medullary basophils, eosinophils,
cavity of long bones basophils
 In adults: largely restricted to the cranial Platelets are formed by the pinching of the
and pelvic bones, the vertebrae, the cytoplasm of a megakaryocyte.
sternum, and the proximal epiphyses of the
femur and umerus.
o Spongy medulla is replaced by
adipose tissue
 Extramedullar hemopoiesis
o Hemopoeisis outside the medullary
cavity of adult bones
o The liver and spleen maintain their
ability to generate the formed
elements of blood cells throughout
adulthood  Reticulocyte
 Spleen is for graveyard of o Important indicator of erythropoiesis
RBCs or ongoing production of RBCs
 Myeloblast
 Hematopoietic stem cell (Hemocytoblast) o Precursor of granulocytes
o All of the formed elements of blood  Basophil
originate from this specific type of  Allergy, production of
cell histamine
o Totipotent or multipotent  Neutrophils
 Maraming ability to branch  Immediate leukocyte
into employed after
 Hemopoietic growth factors bacterial infection
o Induce the hematopoietic stem cell  Eosinophil
to divide and differentiate  Parasitic infection
o Colony stimulating factor – gives rise  Monocyte – agranular leukocyte; become
to developing blood cells macrophages when they undergo
diapedesis
o Lymphoid stem cells o Macrophage in the CNS – microglia
o Lungs – Type II pneumocyte
 Lymphoblast branch to:
o Large granular lymphocyte (NK cells)  Typically 5000 to 10,000 per microliter
 Have a shorter lifespan than that of
o Small lymphocyte erythrocytes (days to weeks)
 T lymphocyte  Routinely leave the bloodstream to
 B lymphocyte perform their defensive functions in the
 Plasma cell body’s tissues
 Responsible to fight o Emigration
off viruses  Process used in leaving the
capillaries
ERYTHROCYTES (RED BLOOD CELLS) o Diapedesis
 The most common formed element  The leukocytes squeeze
o Males have ~5.4 million erythrocytes through adjacent cells in a
per microliter of blood blood vessel wall
o Females have ~4.8 million per  Classification of Leukocytes
microliter o Divided into two groups according
 Small cells: ~7-8 micrometers to whether their cytoplasm
 Life span: 90 days contained highly visible granules
 Biconcave disks
o Why? GRANULOCYTES
 Lack of most organelles,  Contain abundant granules within the
particularly the nucleus cytoplasm
 More space for the  Arise from myeloid stem cells
hemoglobin molecules
 Provides a greater surface for 
gas exchange than a sphere
of a similar diameter
 Capillaries can be so small
that erythrocytes sometimes
fold in on themselves to pass
through
 Sickle cell anemia
o Disease affecting the shape of RBCs
 Sickle-shaped RBCs that
could not pass through
capillaries and not capable of
gas exchange
o Prevalent in Africa; hereditary
o Manifestation:
 Anemia
 Less perfusion to the organ
(schemia)
o Treatment:
 Replace blood present in the
patient with normal RBCs

LEUKOCYTES (WHITE BLOOD CELLS)


 A major component of the body’s defenses
against disease

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