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Encyclopedia > Bloodstream
 (erythrocytes) are present in the blood and help carry oxygen to the rest of the cells in the body
Red blood cells (erythrocytes) are present in the blood and help carry oxygen to the rest of the cells in the body

Blood is a circulating tissue composed of fluid plasma and cells (red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets). Medical terms related to blood often begin in hemo- or hemato- (BE: haemo- and haemato-) from the Greek word for "blood".

Contents

Blood of different species

There are differences in blood between species.


Humans

Human blood is a liquid tissue; its major function is to transport oxygen necessary to life throughout the body. It also supplies the tissues with nutrients, removes waste products, and contains various components of the immune system defending the body against infection. Endocrine hormones also travel in the blood. There are about 6 U.S. liquid quarts (5.7 liters) of blood in an average human body, accounting for approximately 8% of body mass. Adult humans have about 60 millilitres of blood per kilogram of body weight.


Human blood is red, ranging from bright red when oxygenated to dark red when not. It owes its colour to hemoglobin, a metalloprotein compound containing iron in the form of heme, to which oxygen binds. There exists a popular misconception that deoxygenated blood is blue and that blood only becomes red when it comes into contact with oxygen. Blood does not ever look blue. The veins appear blue because light is diffused by skin. Moreover, the blood inside is dark red and exhibit poor light reflection. From a physiological perspective, veins and arteries appear similar when skin is removed and are seen directly. Veins and arteries are actually whitish in color and slightly translucent. However, histologically there are differences between the two. And arteries, because of the high pressure, have thicker walls than veins.


Blood moves in blood vessels and is circulated by the heart, a muscular pump. It passes to the lungs to be oxygenated, and then is circulated throughout the body by the arteries. It diffuses its oxygen by passing through tiny blood vessels called capillaries. It then returns to the heart through the veins. See circulatory system for a more detailed description of this circulation.


Blood also transports metabolic waste products, drugs and other foreign chemicals to the liver to be degraded and to the kidney to be excreted in urine.


A buffer of carbonic acid (H2CO3) and bicarbonate (HCO3-) is present in the human blood stream, in order to maintain a pH between 7.35 and 7.45.


See also:

Insects

In insects, the blood (more properly called hemolymph) is not involved in the transport of oxygen. (Openings called tracheae allow oxygen from the air to diffuse directly to the tissues). Insect blood moves nutrients to the tissues and removes waste products.


Small invertebrates

In some small invertebrates like insects, oxygen is simply dissolved in the plasma. larger animals use respiratory proteins to increase the oxygen carrying capacity. Hemoglobin is the most common respiratory protein found in nature. Hemocyanin (blue) contains copper and is used in crustaceans and mollusks. Sea squirts might use a vanabins containing vanadium (bright green, blue, or orange) for its respiratory pigment.


In many invertebrates, these oxygen-carrying proteins are freely soluble in the blood; in vertebrates they are contained in specialized red blood cells, allowing for a higher concentration of respiratory pigments without increasing viscosity or damaging blood filtering organs like the kidneys.


Anatomy of blood

Blood is composed of several kinds of corpuscles; these formed elements of the blood constitute about 45% of whole blood. The other 55% is blood plasma, a yellowish fluid that is the blood's liquid medium.


The corpuscles are:

  • Red blood cells or erythrocytes (96%). In mammals, these corpuscles lack a nucleus and organelles, so are not cells strictly speaking. They contain the blood's hemoglobin and distribute oxygen. The red blood cells also give rise to the system of blood types.
  • Platelets or thrombocytes (1.0%) are responsible for blood clotting or coagulation.
  • White blood cells or leukocytes (3.0%), are part of the immune system; they destroy infectious agents.

Blood plasma is essentially an aqueous solution containing 96% water, 4% blood plasma proteins, and trace amounts of following:

Together, plasma and corpuscles form a non-Newtonian fluid whose flow properties are uniquely adapted to the architecture of the blood vessels.


The normal pH of arterial blood is approximately 7.40.


Health and disease

Blood is different in health and disease.


Wounds can cause major blood loss. The thrombocytes cause the blood to coagulate, blocking relatively minor wounds, but larger ones must be repaired at speed to prevent exsanguination. Damage to the internal organs can cause severe internal bleeding, or hemorrhage.


Circulation blockage can also create many medical conditions from cyanosis in the short term to tissue necrosis and gangrene in the long term.


Hemophilia is a genetic illness that causes dysfunction in one of the blood's clotting mechanisms. This can allow otherwise inconsequential wounds to be life-threatening, but more commonly results in hemarthrosis, or bleeding into joint spaces, which can be crippling.


Leukaemia (more often called leukemia) is a group of cancers of the blood-forming tissues.


Major blood loss, whether traumatic or not (e.g. during surgery), as well as certain blood diseases like anemia and thalassemia, can require blood transfusion. Several countries have blood banks to fill the demand for transfusable blood. A person receiving a blood transfusion must have a blood type compatible with that of the donor.


Blood is an important vector of infection. One well-known example of a blood-borne illness is AIDS, whose virus, HIV, is transmitted through contact between blood, semen, or the bodily secretions of an infected person. Owing to blood-borne infections, bloodstained objects are treated as a biohazard.


Blood pressure is an important diagnostic tool.


Blood in mythology and religion

Due to its importance to life, blood is associated with a number of beliefs. One of the most basic is the use of blood as a symbol for family relationships; to be "related by blood" is to be related by ancestry or descendance, rather than marriage.


Blood and blessing

Among the Germanic tribes (such as the Anglo-Saxons and the Vikings), blood was used during the sacrifices, the Blóts. The blood was considered to have the power of its originator and after the butchering the blood was sprinkled on the walls, on the statues of the gods and on the participants themselves. This act of sprinkling blood was called bleodsian in Old English and the terminology was borrowed by the Catholic Church becoming to bless and blessing.


Judaism

In Judaism, blood cannot be consumed even in the smallest quantity (Leviticus 3:17 and elsewhere); this is reflected in the dietary laws. Blood is purged from meat by salting and pickling.


Other rituals involving blood are the covering of the blood of fowl and game after slaughtering (Leviticus 17:13); the reason given by the Torah is: "Because the soul of every animal is [in] his blood" (ibid 17:14), although from its context in Leviticus 3:17 it would appear that blood cannot be consumed because it is to be used in the sacrificial service (known as the korbanot), in the Temple in Jerusalem.


Ironically, Judaism has historically been the religion to be most affected by Blood libels.


Christianity

Christians believe that the Eucharist wine either is or represents the blood of Jesus shed for their salvation.


Vampire legends

Vampires are fictional beings thought to cheat death by drinking the blood of the living. Porphyrias, a group of inherited or acquired disorders, may have been the source of vampire legends.


Blood in ancient medicine

In the Greek theory of the four bodily humours, which dominated medicine until the 19th century, blood was associated with air, springtime, and with a merry and gluttonous (sanguine) personality. It was also believed to have been produced by the liver, as opposed to the heart. An excess was removed by blood letting or leeching.


Physiology of blood

Blood has diverse physiological roles.


Transport of oxygen in blood

The amount of oxygen dissolved in blood is directly proportional to the PO2 of the blood.


The hemoglobin molecule is the primary transporter of oxygen. 98.5% of the oxygen is chemically combined with the Hb. Only 1.5% is physically dissolved.


Transport of carbon dioxide in blood

When systemic arterial blood flows through capillaries, carbon dioxide diffuses from the tissues into the blood. Some carbon dioxide is dissolved in the blood. Some carbon dioxide reacts with hemoglobin to form carbamino hemoglobin. The remaining carbon dioxide is converted to bicarbonate and hydrogen ions. Most carbon dioxide is transported through the blood in the form of bicarbonate ions.


Transport of hydrogen ions in blood

Some oxyhemoglobin loses oxygen and becomes deoxyhemoglobin. Deoxyhemoglobin has a much greater affinity for H+ than does oxyhemoglobin so it binds most of the hydrogen ions.


See also

Cultural and historical aspects


Cardiovascular system

Heart - Aorta - Arteries _ Arterioles - Capillaries _ Venules - Veins - Venae cavae - Pulmonary arteries _ Lungs - Pulmonary veins - Blood


Cardiovascular system _ Blood
Red blood cells - White blood cells - Platelets - Blood plasma
White blood cells
Granulocytes (Neutrophil granulocytes, Eosinophil granulocytes, Basophil granulocytes) _ Lymphocytes - Monocytes
Coagulation
Coagulation factors: - Fibrin - Thrombin - FVII - FVIII _ FIX - FXII _ FXIII - HMWK - vWF
Inhibitors: Antithrombin - Protein C - Protein S - TFPI
Fibrinolysis: Plasmin _ tPA/uPA - PAI-1/2 - α2-AP







  Results from FactBites:
 
CDC - The Impact of Hospital-Acquired Bloodstream Infections (1890 words)
Estimates of nosocomial bloodstream infections from the SCOPE database indicate that 70% occur in patients with central venous catheters (12).
Assuming 200,000 total nosocomial bloodstream infections of which 35% are attributable to central venous catheters and assuming that 45% could be prevented with a catheter bonded with minocycline and rifampin, the number of lives saved according to varying attributable mortality rate estimates would be 4,745 to 9,450 (Table 2).
Previous studies showed 175,000-350,000 nosocomial bloodstream infections/yr, 70% of which were related to central venous catheters; 90% of central venous catheter-related bloodstream infections prevented with antibiotic bonded catheters (11).
Guidance for Industry: Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections - Developing Antimicrobial Drugs for Treatment (4817 words)
Although these infections are usually associated with the presence of fever, a study of intensive-care unit patients with new onset of fever found that 80 to 90 percent of these fevers were not associated with a documented catheter infection.
The estimated percentage of all bacterial bloodstream infections in the adult population that are related to a catheter ranges from 5 to 15 percent, though experts in the field believe the incidence to be higher.
Due to difficulties in diagnosing catheter-related bloodstream infections, a large proportion of patients enrolled into a study may ultimately be found not to have this infection.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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