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Blood Typing Disorders of the Circulatory System
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Page 1: Blood typing

Blood Typing

Disorders of the Circulatory System

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Disorders and Diseases

1. Bacterial endocarditis- inflammation of the inner lining of the heart due to bacterial infection- flaps of certain valves become swollen, when healed the flaps become distorted resulting to a noisy, abnormal heart sounds called heart murmur

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2. Hypertension vs. Hypotension

Normotension- a state relative constancy or homeostasis of blood pressure within its normal range

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Hypertension vs. Hypotension

hypotension- a condition of below normal or deficient blood pressure- blood pressure significantly less than 100/60 mmHg- the person may easily faint, if severe it may be a circulatory shock/ coma

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Hypertension vs. Hypotension

hypertension- an excessive or above normal blood pressure - blood pressure significantly above the upper normal limit of 140/90 mmHg- causes heart to overwork- may overstretch and thin out the walls of arteries creating aneurysms

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Arteriosclerosis

- is an abnormal condition of hardening of the walls of an artery- a condition in which fatty deposits called plaques build up in the artery walls and eventually cause the arteries to stiffen. - plaques bulge into the center of a vessel and restricting blood flow to heart muscle

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Stroke

- sudden death of brain cells when their blood supply is interrupted- some are caused by a blood clot that blocks a blood vessel in the brain- can also occur if a weak blood vessel breaks and causes bleeding in the brain

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Sickle Cell Anemia

Anemia- is a disease of the blood - red blood cells are sickle shaped

- cause them to clog blood vessels

- break a part easily- do not have as much hemoglobin- a disease that you are born with

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Blood Typing

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ABO BLOOD GROUPS

• Our blood types are determined by heredity. People belong to either of eight different blood types:

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ABO BLOOD GROUPS

• The ABO blood type classification system uses the presence or absence of these molecules (A and B) to categorize blood types.

• Presence or absence of the Rh protein. Each blood type is either positive "+" (has the Rh protein) or negative "-" (no Rh protein)

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• Antigens on the surface of the red blood cells

Antigen - any substance that can stimulate the production of antibodies and combine specifically with them.

• The A and B antigens are sugars and the Rh antigens are proteins.

• The antigens expressed in the red blood cells determine an individual's blood type.

ABO BLOOD GROUPS

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ABO BLOOD GROUPS

• combination of some other molecules floating around in the blood plasma called as antibodies.

• You can have A or/and B or/and Rh antigens or none of them.

• You can have A or/and B or/and Rh antibodies or none of them.

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ABO BLOOD GROUPS

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ABO BLOOD GROUPS

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Blood type A Rh-

Antigens (on the surface of the red blood cells):

A antigens. no Rh antigens

Antibodies (in the blood plasma):

B antibodies.Rh antibodies.

If there are A antigens but no B nor Rh antigens, the antibodies in the blood plasma are B and Rh antibodies  

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Blood type A Rh+

Antigens :A antigensRh antigens

Antibodies:B antibodies.

If there are A and Rh antigens but no B antigens, the antibodies in the blood plasma are B antibodies.  

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Blood type B Rh-

Antigens : B antigens

Antibodies:A antibodiesRh antibodies

If there are B antigens but no A nor Rh antigens, the antibodies in the blood plasma are A and Rh antibodies.  

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Blood type B Rh+

Antigens :B antigensRh antigens

Antibodies:A antibodies.

If there are B and Rh antigens but no A antigens, the antibodies in the blood plasma are A antibodies.     

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Blood type AB Rh-

Antigens :A antigensB antigens

Antibodies:Rh antibodies.

If there are A and B antigens but no Rh antigens, the antibodies in the blood plasma are Rh antibodies

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Blood type AB Rh+

Antigens :A antigensB antigensRh anyigens

Antibodies:No antibodies.

If all possible antigens are present, A, B and Rh antigens, there are no antibodies in the blood plasma

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Blood type O Rh-

Antigens :No antigens

Antibodies:A antibodies.B antibodiesRh antibodies

If there are no antigens at all on the surface of the red blood cells, all three possible antibodies are present in the blood plasma: A, B and Rh antibodies

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Blood type O Rh+

Antigens :Rh antigens

Antibodies:A antibodies.B antibodies

If there are Rh antigens but no A nor B antigens, the antibodies present in the blood plasma are A and B antibodies

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- indicates that the blood has reacted with a certain antibody and is therefore not compatible with blood containing that kind of antibody.

- If the blood does not agglutinate, it indicates that the blood does not have the antigens binding the special antibody in the reagent.

Agglutination or Clumping

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Agglutination

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What has happened when the blood agglutinates?

• The blood will agglutinate if the antigens in the patient's blood match the antibodies

• A antibodies attach to A antigens - they match like a lock and key - and thus form a clump of red blood cells. In the same way B antibodies attach to B antigens and Rh antibodies to Rh antigens

• Red blood cells have been linked together, like bunches of grapes, instead of floating around one by one

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Look for agglutination

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Figure out the ABO blood Group

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Figure out the Rh Group

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Blood Type

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Can you determine the blood type?

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Can you determine the blood type?

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Can you determine the blood type?

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Can you determine the blood type?

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Can you determine the blood type?

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Can you determine the blood type?

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Can you determine the blood type?

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Can you determine the blood type?

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- involves taking blood from one person (a donor) and giving it to another (receiver) to replace blood lost in major accidents, or during life-saving operations, for instance.

- is the process of receiving blood products into one's circulation

- are usually given through a tiny tube that is inserted into a vein with a small needle

Blood transfusion

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- If the blood is not compatible in a blood transfusion, then the red blood cells from the donated blood will clump or agglutinate.

- The agglutinated red cells can clog blood vessels and stop the circulation of the blood to various parts of the body.

- The agglutinated red blood cells may also crack and their contents leak out in the body.

- The red blood cells contain hemoglobin which becomes toxic when outside the cell. This can have fatal consequences for the patient.

What happens if you get the wrong blood in a transfusion?

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Who can receive blood from whom?

• ABO blood systemO can only receive blood from: OA can receive blood from: A and OB can receive blood from: B and OAB can receive blood from: AB, A, B and O

• Rh blood systemRh+ can receive blood from: Rh+ and Rh-Rh- can receive blood from: Rh-

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