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What does stem cells originate from?
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Blood
cells originate from Stem Cells
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What are the classifications blood disorders?
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Classification
of Disorders
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Benign – non life threatening
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Anemias
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Coagulation
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Platelet disorders
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Malignant
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Leukemias and Lymphomas
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Explain the Normal RBC?
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Normal
RBC
RBCs
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Hgb=amount of hemoglobin or O2-carrying capacity
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Hct=volume of packed cells
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Reticulocyte count number of immature (Reticulocyte count)
,
MCV (Mean Corpuscular Volume - increased
with B12 and Folate deficiency; decreased with iron
deficiency and thalassemia elevated
for alcholism, liver, anemias, MCHC = Mean
Corpuscular Hemoglobin - May be decreased when MCV is decreased; increases limited to amount
of Hgb that will fit inside a RBC
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Normal values differ by gender - Why? Testosterone male
hormone stimulates bone marrow
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Describe what an RBC is?
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RBC = most
common, concave disc, can change shape, Decreased with anemia; increased when too many made and with
fluid loss due to diarrhea, dehydration, burns
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What does the hemoglobin molecule do?
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HgB molecule - carry's oxygen
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What is hematorcrit?
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The percentage of blood that is comprised of red blood cells.(volume of packed cells)
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What is the formula for making RBC's?
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Recipe
for Making RBCs
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Adequate # stem cells
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Healthy stem cells
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Erythropoietin – produced by the kidneys and stimulates
the bone marrow à RBC’s
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Vitamins - B12, folate (Gastric Bypass needs B12 –
shots)
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Iron
RBCs
break down à phagocytes à Bilirubin
I
Iron
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What is Erythropoiesis?
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Erythropoiesis
= Production of RBC
(dialysis is hard on the RBC’s)
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Bone Marrow (vertebrae, sternum, ribs, skull, pelvis, proximal long bones)
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tissue hypoxia (increase RBC’s and in high altitude)
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RBC formation = 3-5 days; life span = 120 days
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Breakdown RBC; amino acids & iron reused
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heme
-
low hemoglobin a production problem or a blood loss
problem
bilirubin
liver
bile
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Bilirubin accumulation = jaundice = yellow
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Explain Normal RBC Indicies?
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Normal
RBC Indices
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Normal RBC=Male 4.2-5.4, Female 3.6-5.0
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Hct= 3 x Hgb
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Hgb
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Male 14-16 g/dL
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Female 12-15
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Reticulocyte count -1-1.5%
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MCV - 85-100
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MCHC - 31-35
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Explain what Anemia is?
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Anemia
- Low Red Blood Cell Count
Production
Problem
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Bone marrow problem
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Lack of raw materials
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Iron; B12; Folate
Taking Thymine – could be alcohol problem
Blood
Loss or Destruction Problem
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Hemolysis
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Bleeding
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Anemia is usually caused by what two things?
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Production or Blood Loss
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What are some effects of Anemia?
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Effects
of Anemia
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_O2 carry capacity _ tissue Hypoxia (resp rate
increases, blood pressure increases, pulse goes up) (possible angina)
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What are some production problems for Anemia?
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Production
Problem: Iron Deficiency
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Iron (Fe) – Iron is added with Vitamin C to help with
absorbing, 2/3 of the world have parasite, spoon shape nails, irregular heart
beat, crack in sides of mouth (cheilosis), pica – eating things that ….
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Deficiency – give iron, cause black dark stools
hypochromic
(low MCH); microcytic (low MCV) RBC
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Males - blood loss - GI bleed, surgery
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Females - menses; GI bleed, surgery, pregnancy
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What are some production problems with anemia?
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Production
Production:
B12
Deficiency (Pernicious Anemia) (vegetarians could have problems)
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Intrinsic factor (IF)
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B12 binds IF
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Dietary
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Dairy products, liver, shrimp, eggs
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Inadequate absorption
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Pernicious Anemia - lack intrinsic factor
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Ileal resection, loss of pancreas, gastrectomy
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What is some maifestations of B12 Deficiency?
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Manifestations
of B12 Deficiency – Synthesis of DNA, cell maturing,
absorbtion problem (intrinsic and parietal cells)
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Symptoms: pallor, weakness, sl. jaundice, smooth sore, beefy
tongue, diarrhea
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Neurologic - neuropathy
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B12 level part of every neuropathy work-up
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Replacement
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