Top Banner
Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases
29

Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

Dec 17, 2015

Download

Documents

Florence Wilson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

Anatomy and Physiology

3/15 and 3/16Review Blood Typing Genetics

Review HemostasisReview Leukemia

Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases

Page 2: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

Blood Typing

• Blood Type Problems 1-15

• Blood Type Problems 1-3

• Blood Type Problems 1-8

Page 3: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

Hemostasis, Leukemia and Blood Disorders

Page 4: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

1. What is vasospasm and why is it important to hemostasis?• Vasospasm is a contraction of the smooth muscles in the walls of

small blood vessels

• Vasospasm is important because it slows blood loss before any other system has a chance

Page 5: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

2. What relationship does serotonin have with hemostasis?• Serotonin can cause contraction of smooth muscles in the blood

vessels (vasospasm)

Page 6: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

3. Describe the steps in formation of a platelet plug?• Break in vessel wall leads to blood escaping

• Platelets adhere to each other, to the broken vessel and to the exposed collagen

• Platelet plug slows/stops the blood loss

Page 7: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

4. The major event in blood clot formation is the conversion of ___________ to ________________.

• Fibrinogen Fibrin

Page 8: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

5. Describe the major steps in blood clot formation• Tissue Damage leads to• Vasospasm• Platelet Plug Formation• Blood Clot Formation

• Prothrombin Activator activates Prothrombin• Prothrombin is converted into Thrombin• Thrombin helps convert Fibrinogen into Fibrin• Fibrin threads interweave and form the clot

Page 9: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

6. Why don’t massive clots form throughout the cardiovascular system?• Blood flow prevents massive clots by rapidly carrying excess thrombin

away and keeping its concentration too low in any one place

Page 10: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

7. What is the difference between a thrombus and an embolus?• Thrombus – abnormally forming blood clot in a vessel

• Embolus – a clot that dislodges and is carried away in the blood flow

Page 11: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

8. What are some of the symptoms of Hemophilia?• Severe hemorrhage after minor injury• Frequent Nosebleeds• Large Intramuscular hematomas• Blood in urine

Page 12: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

9. What is the most common form of Hemophilia?• Hemophilia A

Page 13: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

10. Why is hemophilia A more prevalent in males?• Hemophilia A is more prevalent in males because it is an X-linked

recessive trait and because men only have one X chromosome, if it contains the allele for hemophilia A then the male has it.

XH

Xh

XH Y

XH XH

XH Xh

XH Y

Xh Y

Page 14: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

11. What is the treatment for Hemophilia A?• Replacing the coagulation factor VIII

Page 15: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

12. What are some symptoms of von Willebrand Disease?• Tendency to bleed and bruise easily

Page 16: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

13. How common is von Willebrand Disease and is it more prevalent in either sex?

• 1/100 people inherits a mutation in one of the four genes that encode the von Willebrand clotting factor

• 1/10,000 individuals actually develop the symptoms

• Same prevalence in males and females

Page 17: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

14. What is von Willebrand Factor and why is it important?• Plasma protein secreted by endothelial cells lining blood vessels

• It is important because it enables platelets to adhere to damaged blood vessel walls

Page 18: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

15. What complications may result from von Willebrand Disease?• Gastrointestinal and Urinary Tract bleeding

• Extra heavy menstrual bleeding

Page 19: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

16. What is Factor V Leiden?

• Mutation in the gene that codes for clotting factor V

Page 20: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

17. Why is Factor V Leiden so dangerous?• It can cause dangerous clots to form in the blood

Page 21: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

18. What are some factors that can lead to dangerous blood clots?• Factor V Leiden• Very long car rides• Oral Contraceptives• Grapefruit when taking oral contraceptives

Page 22: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

19. What is the difference between Myeloid and Lymphoid Leukemia?• Myeloid Leukemia – cancer of myeloid cells

• Lymphoid Leukemia – cancer of lymphocytes

Page 23: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

20. What are some of the most common symptoms of Leukemia?• Fatigue• Headaches• Nosebleeds• Frequent Respiratory Infections• Fever• Bone Pain• Bruising• Slow Blood Clotting

Page 24: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

21. What effects does leukemia have on red blood cells and platelets?• Red blood cells are reduced in number leading to anemia

• Platelet deficiency (Thrombocytopenia) leads to slow clotting, bruising and bleeding

Page 25: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

22. What is the difference between Acute and Chronic leukemia?• Acute – appears suddenly, progresses rapidly and without treatment

causes death within a few months

• Chronic - begins slowly, may remain undetected for months to years, without treatment life expectancy after symptoms develop is about three years

Page 26: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

23. How do traditional cancer treatments work?• By destroying any cell that divides rapidly

Page 27: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

24. How does the drug Gleevec work?• Targets only cancer cells

• Nestles into ATP binding sites on the enzyme tyrosine kinase which blocks the message for the cell to divide.

Page 28: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

25. What are some other treatment options for leukemia?• Bone Marrow and Stem Cell Transplants

Page 29: Anatomy and Physiology 3/15 and 3/16 Review Blood Typing Genetics Review Hemostasis Review Leukemia Review Blood Related Genetic Diseases.

26. How has diagnosis been refined to increased treatment of leukemia?• Using DNA Microarray to identify the proteins that particular leukemic

cells produce.

• Different types of proteins produced changes the treatment needed