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Red Blood Cell is called? |
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Males have____ litres of blood in circulation, females have_____ litres of blood in circulation? |
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Definition
Males 5-6 litres
Females 4-5 litres |
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Percentage of blood occupied by cells |
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Normal range of blood occupied by females ___, males ____? |
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Not enough red blood cells or hemoglobin? |
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Too many red blood cells (over 65%) |
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Number of red blood cells in each micoliter of blood (drop)? |
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How long does a typical blood cell live? |
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Why are red blood cells unable to reproduce themselves? |
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Definition
They lack nuclei and organelles |
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These remove worn out red blood cells from spleen or liver? |
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Hemeglobin seperates into? |
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This transports Heme (iron)? |
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Heme is stored in muscle fibers, storage is called? |
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Definition
Process of producing red blood cells by stem cells in bone marrow |
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This portion of heme which is not iron is called? |
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Definition
Red Blood Cell precuser found in red bone marrow |
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When a proerythroblast (RBC precurser) ejects its own nucleus becomes? |
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Reticulocyte circulates for this many days releasing remaining organelles? |
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Two portions that blood seperates into: |
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Definition
Serum- blood plasma (straw colour)
Clot- insoluble fibre called fibrin |
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Three stages of clot formation? |
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Definition
Two pathways (tissue damage)
Prothrombinase
Thrombin |
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Term
Tissue Factor is released from damage cells and if this is present clotting cascade begins? |
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Which pathway is more complex? |
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Accerlerates formation prothombinase? |
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If blood serum leaks between fibrin threads this occurs? |
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Definition
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This vitamin is required for normal clotting? |
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This system gets rid of clots or keeps them from getting out of hand? |
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process which clot is dissolved |
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Definition
produced by white blood cells, inhibits patelet adhesion |
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clot forming in an unbroken blood vessel on rough inner lining |
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Definition
clot, air bubble or fat from broken bone in the blood |
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When a object migrates from one part of the body to cause a blockage in another part? |
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What are the 4 blood groups? |
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Definition
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Glycoprotins and glycolipids are? |
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Definition
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This can distinguish different blood groups and blood types? |
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Definition
Presence or absence of certain antigens |
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Definition
clump together two differsent blood type |
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These are universal recipients |
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Definition
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Universal blood donors are? |
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Ability to ward off disease? |
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Definition
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Definition
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Bodily defences that protect us from almost any kind of pathogen |
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Definition
Non specific resistance
reacts the same to all pathogens |
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Immunity or ability to fight a specific pathogen? |
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Definition
Specfic resistance aka immunity |
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Term
Two ways specfic resistance (immunity) is possible? |
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Definition
Cell mediated immunity (T cell)
Antibody mediated immunity (Bcell) |
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Functions of lympatic system? |
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Definition
Drain excess interstitual fluid
Transporting dietary lipid, vitamin from GI-blood
Facilitating Immune respones |
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Definition
cells abilty to act as a mediator of immunity (recognize and respond to specfic antigens) |
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Term
These cells are developed in bone marrow from pluripotent stem cells |
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ability to have multiple outcomes |
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This cell develops in Thymus, arise from pluripotent stem cell |
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These cells arise before puberty and continue throughout life? |
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Definition
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What are the two required characteristics of an antigen? |
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Definition
Immonogenicity- ablilty to provoke immune response
Reactivity- ability to react to cells antibodies it caused to form |
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Term
Three routes foreign materials may get into the body? |
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Definition
Blood stream- deposited in the spleen
Skin- penetrates skin, ends up in lymph nodes
muscous membrane- logged in lymphatic tissue |
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Definition
Mucosa Associated Lymphatic Tissue |
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Term
Major Histocompatibility complex antigens |
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Definition
unique surface markersm binds to parts of foreign antigens and present them to T cells |
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Definition
built into the cell membrane of all cells except red blood cells |
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Definition
markers seen on membranes of all antigen presenting cells |
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Definition
small protein hormones involved in immune responses, have the ability to stimulate or inhibit normal cell functions, active T cells |
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What are the two things that a T cell needs to recognize an antigen? |
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Definition
T cell receptors must be designed for specific antigen
CD4 or CD8 surface protein must bind with antigen MHC complex |
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Does a T cell require both a first and second signal? |
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Definition
prevents accidental immune responses |
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Definition
prolonged state of inactivity |
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Term
Bone marrow and thymes are both forms of? |
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Definition
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Term
MALT, lymph nodes are forms of this type of organs? |
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Definition
Secondary lymphatic organs |
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Term
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Definition
Helper T cells
Cytotoxic T cells (killer)
Memory T cells |
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Term
5 different classes of antibodies |
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Definition
IgG (most abundant, crosses placenta)
IgA (stress decreases levels of IgA)
IgM (first secreted by plasma cells)
IgD
IgE (involved in hypersensitivity and allergic reactions) |
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Definition
responses are quicker and more intense the second time, first immune response takes days, second response can take only hours |
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Definition
no antibodies produced for 10 days to 4 weeks, first antibodies produced are IgM then IgG |
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Definition
response much quicker, IgG reacts as quickly as IgM, response can occur without getting sick, 1000's memory cells |
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Diagonstic tool to see how much antibody your body produces in presence to certain antigens |
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Naturally acquired Active- immunity occurs when a person is exposed to to live pathogen
Naturally acquired passive immunity- through placenta before birth
Artifically Aquired Active- induced by a vaccine
Artifically Acquired Passive Immunity- short term immunization induced by transfer of antibodies |
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