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Old Saturday, February 25, 2006
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Default Blood Composition :

Composition of Blood –

( in papers 1981, 1988, 1995)

A General View:
Blood volume is variable, but tends to be about 8% of body weight.
Blood is devided into 2 Parts PLASMA and BLOOD CELLS....

Plasma is 55% of Blood.

AND There are four major types of blood cells:
1)Red blood cells,
2)Platelets,
3)White Blood Cells (Leukocytes) which have sub divisions also:

Each type of blood cell has a specialized function:
Red cells take up oxygen from the lungs and deliver it to the tissues;
Platelets participate in forming blood clots;
White Blood Cells:
-->Lymphocytes are involved with immunity; and
-->Phagocyte


(Now lets move to a bit Detail)...

PLASMA:
The liquid portion of the blood, the plasma,(55% of Blood) is a complex solution containing more than 90 percent water. The water of the plasma is freely exchangeable with that of body cells and other extra cellular fluids and is available to maintain the normal state of hydration of all tissues.
Water, the single largest constituent of the body, is essential to the existence of every living cell. The major solute of plasma is a heterogeneous group of proteins constituting about 7 percent of the plasma by weight. The principle difference between the plasma and the extra cellular fluid of the tissues is the high protein content of the plasma. Plasma protein exerts an osmotic effect by which water tends to move from other extra cellular fluid to the plasma. Fatty substances (lipids) are present in plasma in suspension and in solution. Other plasma constituents include salts, glucose, amino acids, vitamins, hormones, and waste products of metabolism.


Leukocytes (White Blood Cell)
White cells, unlike red cells, are nucleated (have Nucleus) and independently mobile. Highly differentiated for their specialized functions, they do not undergo mitosis (ordinary cell division) in the bloodstream, but some retain the capability of cell division. As a group they are involved in the body's defense mechanisms and reparative activity. The number of leukocytes in normal blood ranges between 4,500 and 11,000 per cubic millimetre. Fluctuations occur during the day; lower values are obtained during rest and higher values during exercise. As living cells, their survival depends on their continuous production of energy. The chemical pathways utilized are more complex than those of the red cells and are similar to those of other tissue cells.
Leukocytes, containing a nucleus and able to produce RNA, can synthesize protein.

Thrombocytes Platelets

Platelets are formed when cytoplasmic fragments of megakaryocytes, which are very large cells in the bone marrow, pinch off into the circulation as they age. The platelet is metabolically more active than the Red blood cell and has a variety of functions. Platelets play an important and not fully understood role in the formation of the blood clot by coagulating to occlude a cut blood vessel and provide a surface on which strands of fibrin form an organized clot, by contracting to pull the fibrin strands together to make the clot firm and permanent, and, perhaps most important, by providing or mediating a series of coagulation (clotting) factors necessary to the formation of the clot. Platelets also store and transport several chemicals, including serotonin, epinephrine, and histamine (the importance of which in this capacity is unknown), and they phagocytose (absorb) foreign bodies, including viruses, as well.


Erythrocytes (Red Blood Cell)
The red cell is enclosed in a thin membrane that is composed of chemically complex lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates in a highly organized structure. Extraordinary distortion of the red cell occurs in its passage through minute blood vessels, many of which have a diameter less than that of the red cell. When the deforming stress is removed, the cell springs back to its original shape. The red cell readily tolerates bending and folding, but, if appreciable stretching of the membrane occurs, the cell is damaged or destroyed. The membrane is freely permeable to water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, glucose, urea, and certain other substances, but it is impermeable to hemoglobin. Within the cell the major cation is potassium; in contrast, in plasma and extra cellular fluids the major cation is predominantly sodium. A pumping mechanism, driven by enzymes within the red cell, maintains its sodium and potassium concentrations.



What is Anemia?

The fraction occupied by the red cells is called the hematocrit. Normally it is approximately 45%. Values much lower than this are a sign of anemia
Anemia is a shortage of
• RBCs and/or
• the amount of hemoglobin in them.
Anemia has many causes. One of the most common is an inadequate intake of iron in the diet.
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Last edited by Shooting Star; Sunday, May 13, 2012 at 01:58 AM.
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