Blood
What is blood?
Blood is made up of liquid, called plasma, and various different
types of cells. An average-size man has about 5-6 litres of blood in his body,
a woman has slightly less. Blood has many different functions - detailed below.
Where is blood found?
Blood is found in blood vessels. Blood vessels supply every part
of your body. These include arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules and
veins. Blood is pumped through blood vessels by your heart.
What is normal blood made up of?
- Blood cells, which
can be seen under a microscope, make up about 40% of the blood's volume.
Blood cells are divided into three main types:
- Red cells (erythrocytes).
These make blood a red colour. One drop of blood contains about five
million red cells. A constant new supply of red blood cells is needed to
replace old cells that break down. Millions of red blood cells are made
each day. Red cells contain a chemical called haemoglobin. This binds to
oxygen, and takes oxygen from the lungs to all parts of the body.
- White cells (leucocytes).
There are different types of white cells which are called neutrophils
(polymorphs), lymphocytes, eosinophils, monocytes, and basophils. They
are part of the immune system. Their main role is to defend the body
against infection. Neutrophils engulf bacteria and destroy them with
special chemicals. Eosinophils and monocytes also work by swallowing up
foreign particles in the body. Basophils help to intensify inflammation.
Inflammation makes blood vessels leaky. This helps specialised white
blood cells get to where they are needed. Lymphocytes have a variety of
different functions. They attack viruses and other pathogens. They also
make antibodies which help to destroy bacteria.
- Platelets.
These are tiny and help the blood to clot if we cut ourselves.
- Plasma is
the liquid part of blood and makes up about 60% of the blood's volume.
Plasma is mainly made from water, but also contains many different
proteins and other chemicals such as hormones, antibodies, enzymes,
glucose, fat particles, salts, etc.
When blood spills from your body (or a blood sample is taken
into a plain glass tube) the cells and certain plasma proteins clump together
to form a clot. The remaining clear fluid is called serum.
What does blood do?
Blood has a variety of different functions. These include:
- Transport.
Blood takes oxygen from the lungs to the cells of the body. It takes
carbon dioxide from the body's cells to the lungs for exhalation. It
carries nutrients, hormones and waste products.
- Regulation. Blood
helps to keep the acid-alkali balance of the body in check. It also plays
a part in regulating body temperature. Increasing the amount of blood
flowing close to the skin helps the body to lose heat.
- Protection.
White blood cells attack and destroy invading bacteria and other
pathogens. Blood clots which protects the body from losing too much blood
after injury.
The bone marrow, stem cells and blood cell
production
Bone
marrow
Blood cells are made in the bone marrow by 'stem' cells. The
bone marrow is the soft 'spongy' material in the centre of bones. The large
flat bones such as the pelvis and breast-bone (sternum) contain the most bone
marrow. To constantly make blood cells you need a healthy bone marrow. You also
need nutrients from your diet including iron and certain vitamins.
Stem
cells
Stem cells are primitive (immature) cells. There are two main
types in the bone marrow - myeloid and lymphoid stem cells. These derive from
even more primitive common 'pluripotent' stem cells. Stem cells constantly
divide and produce new cells. Some new cells remain as stem cells and others go
through a series of maturing stages ('precursor' or 'blast' cells) before
forming into mature blood cells. Mature blood cells are released from the bone
marrow into the bloodstream.
- Lymphocyte white
blood cells develop from lymphoid stem cells. There are three types of
mature lymphocytes:
- B lymphocytes make
antibodies which attack infecting bacteria, viruses, etc.
- T lymphocytes help
the B lymphocytes to make antibodies.
- Natural killer cells
which also help to protect against infection.
- All the other
different blood cells (red blood cells, platelets, neutrophils, basophils,
eosinophils and monocytes) develop from myeloid stem cells.
Blood
production
You make millions of blood cells every day. Each type of cell
has an expected life-span. For example, red blood cells normally last about 120
days. Some white blood cells last just hours or days - some last longer. Every
day millions of blood cells die and are broken down at the end of their
life-span. There is normally a fine balance between the number of blood cells
that you make, and the number that die and are broken down. Various factors
help to maintain this balance. For example, certain hormones in the
bloodstream, and chemicals in the bone marrow called 'growth factors', help to
regulate the number of blood cells that are made.
Blood, oxygen and other chemicals
The cells that make up
the organs and tissues of your body need oxygen to live. They also produce
carbon dioxide which needs to be removed from the body. One of the main
functions of blood is to transport oxygen and carbon dioxide around the body.
A special chemical called haemoglobin is found inside red blood cells. Haemoglobin has a strong attraction to oxygen. Red blood cells pass through the lungs within the bloodstream. Here in the lungs the oxygen you breathe in passes into red blood cells, and binds to haemoglobin. Blood then flows from the lungs to the heart. The heart pumps blood around the body. When red blood cells come into contact with tissues that need oxygen, haemoglobin releases the oxygen it is carrying.
A special chemical called haemoglobin is found inside red blood cells. Haemoglobin has a strong attraction to oxygen. Red blood cells pass through the lungs within the bloodstream. Here in the lungs the oxygen you breathe in passes into red blood cells, and binds to haemoglobin. Blood then flows from the lungs to the heart. The heart pumps blood around the body. When red blood cells come into contact with tissues that need oxygen, haemoglobin releases the oxygen it is carrying.
Carbon dioxide produced by your body's tissues is also carried by blood. When it reaches the lungs it passes out of the blood vessels and into your airways. This allows carbon dioxide to leave your body when you breathe out.
As well as transporting oxygen and carbon dioxide, blood carries many of the chemicals and nutrients essential to life. This includes the nutrients produced by the digestion of food, enzymes (chemicals produced by the body), hormones and waste products. Blood also helps to buffer all the different chemicals in the body. By doing this it stops your body fluids from becoming too acidic or too alkali.
Blood and blood vessels
The main function of blood vessels is to transport blood around
the body. Blood vessels are found throughout the body. There are five main
types of blood vessels: arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules and veins.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart to other organs. They can vary in size.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart to other organs. They can vary in size.
Arterioles are the smallest arteries in the body. They deliver blood to capillaries. Arterioles are also capable of constricting or dilating and by doing this they control how much blood enters the capillaries.
Capillaries are tiny vessels that connect arterioles to venules. They have very thin walls which allow nutrients from the blood to pass into the body tissues. Waste products from body tissues can also pass into the capillaries. For this reason capillaries are known as exchange vessels.
Groups of capillaries within a tissue reunite to form small veins called venules. Venules collect blood from capillaries and drain into veins.
Veins are the blood vessels that carry blood back to the heart. They may contain valves which stop blood flowing away from the heart.
What is a blood group?
Red blood cells have certain proteins on their surface called
antigens. Also, your plasma contains antibodies which will attack certain antigens
if they are present. There are various types of red blood cell antigens - the
ABO and rhesus types are the most important.
ABO
types
These were the first type discovered.
- If you have type A
antigens on the surface of your red blood cells, you also have anti-B
antibodies in your plasma.
- If you have type B
antigens on the surface of your red blood cells, you also have anti-A
antibodies in your plasma.
- If you have type A
and type B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells, you do not
have antibodies to A or B antigens in your plasma.
- If you have neither
type A or type B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells, you have
anti-A and anti-B antibodies in your plasma.
Rhesus
types
Most people are 'rhesus positive' as they have rhesus antigens on
their red blood cells. But, about 3 in 20 people do not have rhesus antibodies
and are said to be 'rhesus negative'.
Blood
group names
Your 'blood group' depends on which antigens occur on the
surface of your red blood cells. Your blood group is said to be:
- A+ (A positive) if
you have A and rhesus antigens.
- A– (A negative) if
you have A antigens, but not rhesus antigens.
- B+ (B positive) if
you have B and rhesus antigens.
- B– (B negative) if
you have B antigens, but not rhesus antigens.
- AB+ (AB positive) if
you have A, B and rhesus antigens.
- AB– (AB negative) if
you have A and B antigens, but not rhesus antigens.
- O+ (O positive) if
you have neither A nor B antigens, but you have rhesus antigens.
- O– (O negative) if
you have do not have A, B or rhesus antigens.
Other
blood types
There are many other types of antigen which may occur on the
surface of red blood cells. However, most are classed as 'minor' and are not as
important as ABO and rhesus.
How does blood clot?
Within seconds of cutting a blood vessel, the damaged tissue
causes platelets to become 'sticky' and clump together around the cut. These
'activated' platelets and the damaged tissue release chemicals which react with
other chemicals and proteins in the plasma called 'clotting factors'. There are
13 known clotting factors which are called by their Roman numbers - factor I to
factor XIII. A complex cascade of chemical reactions involving these clotting
factors quickly occurs next to a cut. The final step of this cascade of
chemical reactions is to convert factor I (also called fibrinogen - a soluble
protein) into thin strands of a solid protein called fibrin. The strands of
fibrin form a meshwork, and trap blood cells and platelets so that a solid clot
is formed.
If a blood clot forms within a healthy blood vessel it can cause serious problems. So, there are also chemicals in the blood which prevent clots from forming, and chemicals which 'dissolve' clots. So, there is a balance between forming clots and preventing clots. Normally, unless a blood vessel is damaged or cut, the 'balance' tips in favour of preventing clots forming within blood vessels.
If a blood clot forms within a healthy blood vessel it can cause serious problems. So, there are also chemicals in the blood which prevent clots from forming, and chemicals which 'dissolve' clots. So, there is a balance between forming clots and preventing clots. Normally, unless a blood vessel is damaged or cut, the 'balance' tips in favour of preventing clots forming within blood vessels.
Some types of blood disorders
Problems
with blood cells
- Anaemia means
that you have less red blood cells than normal, or have less haemoglobin
than normal in each red blood cell. There are many causes of anaemia. For
example, the most common cause of anaemia in the UK is a lack of iron.
(Iron is needed to make haemoglobin.) Other causes include lack of
vitamins B12 or folate which are needed to make red blood cells.
Abnormalities of red blood cell production can cause anaemia. For example,
various hereditary conditions such as sickle cell disease and
thalassaemia.
- Too many red cells is
called polycythaemia and can be due to various causes.
- Too few white cells is
called leucopenia. Depending on which type of white cell is reduced it can
be called neutropenia, lymphopenia, or eosinopenia. There are various
causes.
- Too many white blood
cells is
called leucocytosis. Depending on which type of white cell is increased it
is called neutrophilia, lymphocytosis, eosinophilia, monocytosis,
basophilia. There are various causes. For example:
- Various infections
can cause an increase of white blood cells.
- Certain allergies
can cause an eosinophilia.
- Leukaemia causes a
large increase in the number of white blood cells. The type of leukaemia
depends on the type of white cell affected.
- Too few platelets which
is called thrombocytopenia. This may make you bruise or bleed easily.
There are various causes.
- Too many platelets which
is called thrombocythaemia (or thrombocytosis). This is due to disorders
which affect cells in the bone marrow which make platelets.
Bleeding
disorders
There are various conditions where you tend to bleed excessively
if you damage or cut a blood vessel. For example:
- Too few platelets
(thrombocytopenia) - due to various causes.
- Genetic conditions
where you do not make one or more clotting factors. The most well known is
haemophilia A which occurs in people who do not make factor VIII.
- Lack of vitamin K can
cause bleeding problems as you need this vitamin to make certain clotting
factors.
- Liver disorders can
sometimes cause bleeding problems as your liver makes most of the clotting
factors.
Clotting
disorders (thrombophilia)
Sometimes a blood clot forms within a blood vessel which has not
been injured or cut. For example:
- A blood clot which
forms within a coronary (heart) artery or in an artery within the brain is
the common cause of heart attack and stroke. The platelets become sticky
and clump next to patches of atheroma (fatty material) in blood vessels
and activate the clotting mechanism.
- Sluggish blood flow
can make blood clot more readily than usual. This is a factor in deep vein
thrombosis (DVT) which is a blood clot that sometimes forms in a leg vein.
- Certain genetic
conditions can make the blood clot more easily than usual.
- Certain medicines can
affect the blood clotting mechanism, or increase the amount of some
clotting factors, which may result in the blood clotting more readily.
- Liver disorders can
sometimes cause clotting problems as your liver makes some of the
chemicals involved in preventing and dissolving clots.
Problems
with blood groups
If you have a blood transfusion, it is vital that the blood you
receive is compatible with your own. For example, if you receive blood from a
person who is A positive and you are B positive, then the anti-A antibodies in
your plasma will attack the red blood cells of the donated blood. This causes
the red cells of the donated blood to clump together. This can cause a serious
or even fatal reaction in your body.
So, before a blood transfusion is done, a donor bag of blood is selected with the same ABO and rhesus blood group as yourself. Then, to make sure there is no incompatibility a sample of your blood is mixed with a sample of the donor blood. After a short time the mixed blood is looked at under a microscope to see if there has been any clumping of blood. If there is no clumping, then it is safe to transfuse the blood.
So, before a blood transfusion is done, a donor bag of blood is selected with the same ABO and rhesus blood group as yourself. Then, to make sure there is no incompatibility a sample of your blood is mixed with a sample of the donor blood. After a short time the mixed blood is looked at under a microscope to see if there has been any clumping of blood. If there is no clumping, then it is safe to transfuse the blood.
Some disorders of blood
- Anaemia (various
types)
- Idiopathic
Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)
- Leukaemia
- Myeloma
- Sickle Cell Disease
and Sickle Cell Anaemia
- Sickle Cell Trait and
Sickle Cell Screening Tests
- Thalassaemia
- Thrombophilia
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