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RIDDLE: I am a vessel and a stone, When I am hot my temper is known, I have my own money as well as a bank, If I take a bath the devil you can thank, – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RIDDLE:


1
RIDDLE
  • I am a vessel and a stone, When I am hot my
    temper is known, I have my own money as well as
    a bank, If I take a bath the devil you can
    thank, I have no mercy when I am cold, If I am
    bad ill will shall unfold, I can be thirsty and
    have shot many eyes, In the dead of night as the
    curdling hound cries. What am I?
  • Answer Blood

2
What is the Significance of Blood?
  • Blood literally supplies the very materials that
    maintain life. Flowing through the arteries and
    veins, blood carries oxygen and nutrients to the
    body and returns waste materials to be expelled
    from the body.

3
BLOOD
  • Before it flows through our veins and arteries,
    blood must be created.
  • How does this happen and what is in our blood?

4
What is Blood?
  • Blood is a mixture of cells and watery liquid,
    called plasma that the cells float in.
  • It also contains other things like nutrients
    (such as sugar), hormones, clotting agents, and
    waste products to be flushed out of the body.

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6
PLASMA
  • Is a clear, straw-colored liquid that carries the
    blood cells and various hormones, nutrients, and
    so on through the body
  • It makes up a little more than half of the total
    blood volume.
  • Plasma is about 90 percent water.
  • The rest comprises various kinds of protein
    molecules, including enzymes, clotting agents,
    immunoglobulin (part of the immune system), and
    proteins that carry hormones, vitamins,
    cholesterol, and other things the body needs.
  • Plasma also contains sugar (glucose) and
    electrolytes like sodium, potassium, and calcium,

7
3 Kinds of Cells in the Blood
  • 1. Red blood cells (RBC) carry oxygen from the
    lungs throughout the body
  • 2. White blood cells help fight infection
    (immune response)
  • 3. Platelets help in clotting

8
RED BLOOD CELLS
  • Also called erythrocytes
  • Most numerous
  • making up 40-45 percent of one's blood
  • Shaped like tiny doughnuts with an indentation in
    the center instead of a hole
  • Contains a special molecule called hemoglobin
  • Carries the oxygen
  • The hemoglobin molecules loosely bind with oxygen
  • Each hemoglobin molecule carries four molecules
    of oxygen.
  • What makes blood red?
  • The iron in hemoglobin

9
WHITE BLOOD CELLS
  • Also called leukocytes
  • The body's mobile warriors in the battle against
    infection and invasion.
  • There are three types of white blood cell
    granulocytes, lymphocytes, and monocytes.

White Blood Cell
Blood Vessel Wall
10
PLATELETS
  • Also called thrombocytes help blood to clot
  • In their "resting" state, platelets look like two
    plates stuck together
  • When "activated" and helping to form a clot, they
    change shape and look like tiny roundish blobs
    with tentacles.
  • Smallest kind of blood cell.

Resting Platelets
Activated Platelets
RBC
11
CLOTTING
  • Bleeding occurs platelets clump together to help
    form a clot.
  • Also, when they are exposed to air, platelets
    start breaking down and release a substance into
    the bloodstream.
  • This substance starts a chain of chemical events
    that eventually causes a protein in the blood, to
    turn into a different substance, which forms long
    threads. These threads tangle up red blood cells
    to help form a clot, or scab, over the wound.

12
BLOOD CLOTS
  • A scab is an external blood clot that we can
    easily see
  • Internal blood clots
  • A bruise
  • Both scabs and bruises are clots that lead to
    healing
  • Some clots can be extremely dangerous
  • A blood clot that forms inside of a blood vessel
    can be deadly because it blocks the flow of
    blood, cutting off the supply of oxygen.
  • A stroke is the result of a clot in an artery of
    the brain.
  • If the oxygen flow is broken, paralysis, brain
    damage, loss of sensory perceptions, or even
    death may occur.

13
How is Blood Produced?
  • Blood cells are produced in the bone marrow
  • Bone marrow is a jellylike substance inside the
    bones that is composed of, among other things,
    fat, blood, and special cells that turn into the
    various kinds of blood cells.
  • In children, the marrow of most of the bones
    produces blood.
  • But in adults, only the marrow of certain bones
    -- the spine, ribs, pelvis, and some others --
    continues to make blood.

14
How is Blood Produced?
  • As the blood cells develop from the stem cells in
    the marrow, they seep into the blood that passes
    through the bones and on into the bloodstream.
  • Blood cells "life spans
  • Red blood cells last about 120 days
  • Platelets about 10 days
  • White blood cells can last anywhere from days to
    years.
  • The body has a feedback system that tells it when
    to make new red blood cells.
  • If bodily oxygen levels are low (as they would be
    if there are too few red blood cells
    circulating), the kidneys produce a hormone
    called erythropoietin, which stimulates the stem
    cells in the marrow to produce more red blood
    cells

15
BLOOD TYPES
  • Blood transfusions were not possible until Karl
    Landsteiner first identified in 1901 the major
    human blood groups
  • O, A, B, and AB -- in a series of experiments
  • The ABO blood groups are defined by specific
    inherited molecules, or antigens, that are
    present on the surface of red blood cells.
  • One inherits either A or B antigens (group A or
    B), both A and B antigens (group AB), or neither
    antigen (group O).
  • a person develops a natural immunity, or
    antibody, in their plasma to the ABO antigens
    that are absent on their own red cells.
  • Type A person has anti-B antibodies, and group O
    person has both anti-A and anti-B antibodies.

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17
Blood Types
  • The most common blood types in the U.S. are A
    and O -- about 72 percent of the population has
    one or the other. AB- is the rarest blood type (1
    percent of the population).
  • What blood type is called the universal donor?
  • O- blood group
  • The red blood cells of a universal blood donor
    may be transfused to anyone regardless of their
    blood type.
  • Why is type O blood considered the universal
    donor?
  • Because type O blood does not have any antigens
    on the cells surface.

18
Frequency of Blood Types Frequency of Blood Types
O 1 person in 3
O- 1 person in 15 
A 1 person in 3
A- 1 person in 16
B 1 person in 12
B- 1 person in 67
AB 1 person in 29 
AB- 1 person in 167 
19
Blood Transfusions
  • What would happen if type A blood is mistakenly
    transfused to a group O recipient?
  • the anti-A antibody in the recipient's plasma
    destroys the transfused group A cells and a
    serious transfusion reaction occurs.
  • Why?
  • Because group O has anti-A as well as anti-B
    antibodies, group O recipients can only accept
    blood from group O donors. Conversely, group AB
    recipients can receive blood from all groups.

20
Rh Factor
  • The Rh factor another antigens on the red cell
    surface
  • A person is defined as either Rh positive or Rh
    negative depending on the presence of the primary
    Rh antigen on the red cell.
  • A person only develops anti-Rh after exposure to
    Rh-positive red cells through transfusion or
    pregnancy.
  • Modern blood-banking technology uses highly
    sensitive tests to properly identify and match
    blood between donor and recipient.

21
Examples of Blood Use Average Of Units Required
Automobile Accident 50 units of blood
Heart Surgery 6 units of blood6 units of platelets
Organ Transplant 40 units of blood30 units of platelets20 bags of cryoprecipitate25 units of fresh frozen plasma
Bone Marrow Transplant 120 units of platelets20 units of blood
Burn 20 units of platelets
NOTE One unit of blood is roughly the equivalent
of one pint. On average an adult has
approximately seven to nine units of blood.
22
Sickle Cell Anemia
  • Symptoms Abdominal pain, frequent infections,
    low red cell count, many serious complications
  • Shape of red cells changes and causes O2 stress.
    Cells become sharp and sticky clogging
    capillaries and break apart

23
Malaria
  • Caused by infection though mosquito bite by
    Plasmodium single celled organisms that feeds on
    the hemoglobin protein in
  • RBC.
  • If the RBC is sickled then the parasite starves
    to death and dies.
  • Plasmodium must live in both species to complete
    its life cycle.

24
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