Blood type A: RBC Antigens, Plasma anti-bodies, compatible recipients
RBC Antigens: A
Plasma antibodies : Anti-B
Compatible recipients: A,AB
Blood type AB: RBC antigens, plasma antibodies, compatible recipients
RBC Antigens: A and B
Plasma antibodies: none
Compatible donors: A,B, AB, and O
WBCs that are classified as granulocytes (3)
Neutrophils, Eosinophils, Basophils
Rank white blood cells from least numerous to most numerous (5)
- Basophils
- Eosinophils
- Monocytes
- Lymphocytes
- Neutrophils
What is in a formed element of blood
Red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets
Ranking the components of blood that separate when centrifuged (most superior first)
Plasma
Buffy coat
Red blood cells
The name of the circuit that carries blood from the right ventricle to the lungs and back to the left atrium
Pulmonary circuit
The double-walled sac that surrounds the heart
Pericardium
Given some transfusions, determine compatibility
A transfusion is compatible if the recipient has no antibodies against the donor’s RBC antigens
The body location where circulating WBCs spend most of their lives
Connective tissue
The definition of hemostasis
The stopping of bleeding
Differentiate between what is / what is not a function of blood (3)
Is: transport, regulation, protection
The components of the buffy coat
WBCs and platelets
The most abundant protein in plasma
Albumin
The gases transported by RBCs
Oxygen and carbon dioxide
Whether O₂ and CO₂ bind to the same or different parts of hemoglobin
Different parts
The form of excess iron stored in the liver
Ferritin
The type of cells monocytes differentiate into in tissues
Macrophages
The absence of what substance differentiates serum from plasma
Clotting proteins (Fibrinogen)
The substance to which transported O₂ in blood is bound
Hemoglobin
The antigen(s) found on the surface of RBCs of blood type A, B, AB, or O
A: A antigen
B: B antigen
AB: A and B antigens
O: None
The results of agglutination when mixing type O blood with anti-A serum in one well and with anti-B serum in a second separate well
No agglutination in either
The results of agglutination when mixing type A blood with anti-A serum in one well and with anti-B serum in a second separate well
Anti-A serum= agglutination
Anti-B serum = No agglutination
The cell that has a large nucleus that fills most of the cell
Lymphocyte
The white blood cell that represents the greatest percentage in a normal differential count
Neutrophil