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Blood - The Fluid of Life
The average adult has about five liters of blood coursing through their vessels. It delivers essential elements, and removing harmful wastes from each and every cell in the body. What most medical and allied health students don't realize until it is mentioned either by their instructor or they read about it in their anatomy text book is that blood falls under the category of connective tissues!
BLOOD IS A LIQUID CONNECTIVE TISSUE THAT MEASURES ABOUT 5 LITERS IN THE ADULT HUMAN AND ACCOUNTS FOR 8 PERCENT OF THE BODY WEIGHT. ITS NORMAL pH RANGE IS 7.35-7.45.
Our bodies consist of metabolically active cells that need a continuous supply of nutrients and oxygen. Metabolic waste products need to be removed from the cells to maintain a stable cellular environment. Blood is the primary transport medium that is responsible for meeting these cellular demands.
Materials transported by the blood include nutrients, waste products, gases, and hormones. The blood helps to regulate the fluid and electrolyte balance, acid base balance, and the body temperature. Protection against pathogens is provided by white blood cells, and the clotting mechanism prevents excessive loss of blood after injuries.
FUNCTIONS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF BLOOD
BLOOD FUNCTIONS AS A TRANSPORT MEDIUM. IT ALSO HAS ROLES IN TEMPERATURE REGULATION, FLUID AND ELECTROLYTE BALANCE, pH REGULATION, PREVENTION OF FLUID LOSS, NOURISHMENT AND DISEASE PREVENTION. The general functions of blood include transportation, regulation, and protection. These categories overlap and interact as the blood carries out its role in providing suitable conditions for cellular function.
The following activities are under the transportation function:
The following activities are under the regulation function:
Functions of the blood that are in the protection category:
CHARACTERISTICS OF BLOOD
Blood has distinctive physical characteristics:
COMPOSITION OF BLOOD
When a sample of blood is spun in a centrifuge, the cells and cell fragments are separated from the liquid. Because the formed elements are heavier than the liquid matrix, they are packed in the bottom of the tube by the centrifugal force. The straw colored liquid on the top is the plasma.
A GIVEN VOLUME OF BLOOD IS 55 PERCENT PLASMA AND 45 PERCENT FORMED CELLS.
Plasma is the liquid portion of blood, and it is about 90% water. The remaining portion consists of more than 100 different organic and inorganic solutes that are dissolved in water. Because plasma is a transport medium, it's solutes are continuously changing as substances are added or removed by the cells.
Plasma proteins are the most abundant solutes in the plasma. These proteins remain in the blood and interstitial fluid and are not used for energy. The three major classes of plasma proteins are: albumins, globulins, and fibrinogen. Many of the plasma proteins are synthesized in the liver, and each one has a different function.
Nutrients, oxygen, and carbon dioxide are transported as solutes in the plasma.
FORMED ELEMENTS
The formed elements are cells and cell fragments that are suspended in the plasma.
The three classes of formed elements are:
The production of these formed elements or blood cells is called hemopoeisis!
When the body sustains a minor wound, the platelets cause the blood to clot and with that the bleeding usually stops. The body can easily replace the lost blood from specialized cells, mostly within the red bone marrow. However, if the human body loses a great volume of blood it is possible that this blood has to be replaced through a blood transfusion from blood that was previously donated by someone else.
However, it is important to remember that everybody's blood is not the same. Blood transfusions must be carefully matched. There are four different blood types. Also there are Rh factors which make every person's blood type even more unique. Therefore, blood from a donor must match exactly that of the recipient.Patients who are scheduled to have major surgery sometimes are offered a choice to make autologous blood donations (donations of their own blood) so that they have a perfect match.
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