Blood.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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substances.
For example, a person who is blood type A positive will not make antibodies against the A or Rh markers, but will make antibodies against the B marker,which is not on that person’s own red blood cells.
If blood containing the B marker (from types B positive, B negative, AB positive, or AB negative) is transfused into thisperson, then the transfused red blood cells will be rapidly destroyed by the patient’s anti-B antibodies.
In this case, the transfusion will do the patient no good and mayeven result in serious harm.
For a successful blood transfusion into an A positive blood type individual, blood that is type O negative, O positive, A negative, or Apositive is needed because these blood types will not be attacked by the patient’s anti-B antibodies.
D White Blood Cells
White blood cells only make up about 1 percent of blood, but their small number belies their immense importance.
They play a vital role in the body’s immunesystem—the primary defense mechanism against invading bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites.
They often accomplish this goal through direct attack, which usuallyinvolves identifying the invading organism as foreign, attaching to it, and then destroying it.
This process is referred to as phagocytosis.
White blood cells also produce antibodies, which are released into the circulating blood to target and attach to foreign organisms.
After attachment, the antibody mayneutralize the organism, or it may elicit help from other immune system cells to destroy the foreign substance.
There are several varieties of white blood cells, includingneutrophils, monocytes, and lymphocytes, all of which interact with one another and with plasma proteins and other cell types to form the complex and highly effectiveimmune system.
E Platelets and Clotting
The smallest cells in the blood are the platelets, which are designed for a single purpose—to begin the process of coagulation, or forming a clot, whenever a blood vesselis broken.
As soon as an artery or vein is injured, the platelets in the area of the injury begin to clump together and stick to the edges of the cut.
They also releasemessengers into the blood that perform a variety of functions: constricting the blood vessels to reduce bleeding, attracting more platelets to the area to enlarge theplatelet plug, and initiating the work of plasma-based clotting factors, such as fibrinogen.
Through a complex mechanism involving many steps and many clottingfactors, the plasma protein fibrinogen is transformed into long, sticky threads of fibrin.
Together, the platelets and the fibrin create an intertwined meshwork that formsa stable clot.
This self-sealing aspect of the blood is crucial to survival.
IV PRODUCTION AND ELIMINATION OF BLOOD CELLS
Blood is produced in the bone marrow, a tissue in the central cavity inside almost all of the bones in the body.
In infants, the marrow in most of the bones is activelyinvolved in blood cell formation.
By later adult life, active blood cell formation gradually ceases in the bones of the arms and legs and concentrates in the skull, spine,ribs, and pelvis.
Red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets grow from a single precursor cell, known as a hematopoietic stem cell.
Remarkably, experiments have suggested that asfew as 10 stem cells can, in four weeks, multiply into 30 trillion red blood cells, 30 billion white blood cells, and 1.2 trillion platelets—enough to replace every blood cell inthe body.
Red blood cells have the longest average life span of any of the cellular elements of blood.
A red blood cell lives 100 to 120 days after being released from the marrowinto the blood.
Over that period of time, red blood cells gradually age.
Spent cells are removed by the spleen and, to a lesser extent, by the liver.
The spleen and theliver also remove any red blood cells that become damaged, regardless of their age.
The body efficiently recycles many components of the damaged cells, includingparts of the hemoglobin molecule, especially the iron contained within it.
The majority of white blood cells have a relatively short life span.
They may survive only 18 to 36 hours after being released from the marrow.
However, some of thewhite blood cells are responsible for maintaining what is called immunologic memory.
These memory cells retain knowledge of what infectious organisms the body haspreviously been exposed to.
If one of those organisms returns, the memory cells initiate an extremely rapid response designed to kill the foreign invader.
Memory cellsmay live for years or even decades before dying.
Memory cells make immunizations possible.
An immunization, also called a vaccination or an inoculation, is a method of using a vaccine to make the human bodyimmune to certain diseases.
A vaccine consists of an infectious agent that has been weakened or killed in the laboratory so that it cannot produce disease when injectedinto a person, but can spark the immune system to generate memory cells and antibodies specific for the infectious agent.
If the infectious agent should ever invadethat vaccinated person in the future, these memory cells will direct the cells of the immune system to target the invader before it has the opportunity to cause harm.
Platelets have a life span of seven to ten days in the blood.
They either participate in clot formation during that time or, when they have reached the end of theirlifetime, are eliminated by the spleen and, to a lesser extent, by the liver.
V BLOOD DISEASES
Many diseases are caused by abnormalities in the blood.
These diseases are categorized by which component of the blood is affected.
A Red Blood Cell Diseases
One of the most common blood diseases worldwide is anemia, which is characterized by an abnormally low number of red blood cells or low levels of hemoglobin.
One ofthe major symptoms of anemia is fatigue, due to the failure of the blood to carry enough oxygen to all of the tissues.
The most common type of anemia, iron-deficiency anemia, occurs because the marrow fails to produce sufficient red blood cells.
When insufficient iron is available to thebone marrow, it slows down its production of hemoglobin and red blood cells.
The most common causes of iron-deficiency anemia are certain infections that result ingastrointestinal blood loss and the consequent chronic loss of iron.
Adding supplemental iron to the diet is often sufficient to cure iron-deficiency anemia.
Some anemias are the result of increased destruction of red blood cells, as in the case of sickle-cell anemia, a genetic disease most common in persons of Africanancestry.
The red blood cells of sickle-cell patients assume an unusual crescent shape, causing them to become trapped in some blood vessels, blocking the flow ofother blood cells to tissues and depriving them of oxygen.
B White Blood Cell Diseases
Some white blood cell diseases are characterized by an insufficient number of white blood cells.
This can be caused by the failure of the bone marrow to produceadequate numbers of normal white blood cells, or by diseases that lead to the destruction of crucial white blood cells.
These conditions result in severe immunedeficiencies characterized by recurrent infections..
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Liens utiles
- Gigantes (Giants) Greek The offspring of Gaia and the blood of the wounded Uranus.
- Blood Pressure.
- BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS