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Health
Psychology PSY408
VU
Lecture
11
BLOOD
COMPOSITION
Blood
is sometimes thought of as a "liquid
tissue" because it consists of
cells that are suspended in
a liquid.
The
average adult's body
contains about 5 liters of blood. Because
our bodies can replace
blood quickly, we
can
donate half a liter of blood
with no ill effects.
Blood
composition can affect blood
pressure. As we saw earlier, the thicker
the blood, the more pressure
is
needed
to circulate it. What is
blood made of, and
how does its composition
change its thickness?
Blood
has
two components, formed
elements and plasma. We will
look at formed elements
first.
Formed
Elements
Formed
elements are the cells and
cell-like structures in the blood that
constitute about 45% of our
blood
volume.
There are three types of
formed elements:
1.
Red blood cells are
the most abundant cells in the
blood--there are about 5 million of them
per cubic
millimeter
of blood. They are formed in the bone
marrow and have a lifetime of
about 3 months. Red
blood
cells
are important mainly because they contain
Hemoglobin, a protein substance
that attaches to oxygen
and
transports this element to body
cells and tissues. Anemia is a
condition in which the level of red
blood
cells
or hemoglobin is below normal (AMA,
1989).
2.
Leukocytes are
white blood cells. Each of
several types of leukocytes
serves a special
protective
function--for
example, some engulf or
destroy bacteria. White
blood cells are produced in the
bone
marrow
and various organs in the
body. Although there
normally are several
thousand leukocytes per
cubic
millimeter
of an adult's blood, they are the
least abundant type of formed element.
Leukemia is a malignant
disease
in which abnormal white blood
cells are produced in extremely
high quantities, crowding
out normal
leukocytes,
which fight infection, and
red blood cells, which
prevent anemia.
3.
Platelets are
granular fragments, produced by the bone marrow,
that enable the body to
prevent blood
loss.
They do this by plugging tiny wounds or
helping the blood to clot when the
wound is larger.
Hemophilia
is a disease in which the platelets do
not function properly, thereby
impairing clotting,
because
the
blood lacks a critical
protein.
How
do formed elements affect the viscosity
of blood? The higher the concentration of formed
elements
suspended
in the plasma, the thicker the
blood.
Plasma
Plasma
is a liquid substance that
comprises about 55% of our
blood. About 90% of plasma is water,
and the
remainder
consists of plasma protein
and various other organic
and inorganic elements. Plasma
protein
consists
of large molecules that are
needed within the blood to
help other substances pass
through capillary
walls.
Plasma protein increases the
thickness of the blood.
Although
the remaining elements in plasma constitute
only a small percentage of
its volume, they are
extremely
important substances. They include
hormones, enzymes, and waste
products. They also include
the
nutrients we derive from digestion-- vitamins,
minerals, simple sugars, amino
acids, and fatty
materials.
Fatty
materials make up the broad class of
substances in the blood called lipids.
Two of these fatty
materials
are
triglycerides and cholesterol.
Triglycerides are the material we commonly
think of as fat. Made
of
glycerol
and fatty acids, they are
the most abundant lipid in the body.
Some of the fatty acids in
triglycerides
are
fully hydrogenated--they cannot take up
any more hydrogen--and are
called saturated for that
reason.
They
are usually solid at room
temperature and are mostly derived
from animal fat. Other
fatty acids are
unsaturated
or polyunsaturated. They can
take up more hydrogen, are
usually liquid at room
temperature,
and
are derived from
plants.
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Health
Psychology PSY408
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Cholesterol
is a fatty substance that builds up in
patches on artery walls over
time and narrows the artery.
Although
the body manufactures most of the
cholesterol in the blood, the rest
comes from the foods we
eat.
Eating fats that are
highly saturated tends to
increase blood cholesterol
levels. Let's see why it is a
problem.
CARDIOVASCULAR
DISORDERS
The
accumulation of fatty patches, or
plaques, on artery walls is
called atherosclerosis. These
plaques tend
to
harden. This is a common process by which
the diameter and elasticity of
arteries is reduced--a
condition
called arteriosclerosis. The
narrowing and hardening of arteries
increase blood
pressure.
Although
arteriosclerosis becomes an increasing
problem as adults get older,
plaque begins to form early
in
life.
Autopsies on thousands of 15- to 34-year-old American
males and females who died
of other causes
showed
that arteriosclerosis had
begun in all subjects and
worsened with age.
Of
the many diseases of the heart
and blood vessels, we will
describe just a few. One of them is
myocardial
infarction, or
"heart attack." Infarction
refers to the death of tissue
caused by an obstruction in the
supply
of
blood to it. Thus, a
myocardial infarction is the death of
heart muscle (myocardium)
tissue as a result of
arterial
blockage, usually resulting from
atherosclerosis.
Other
diseases of the heart include congestive
heart failure, aneurysm, and
stroke.
We
will discuss them
in
detail in our later lectures when we
will talk about the biopsychosocial
implications of the Cardiovascular
disorders.
THE
IMMUNE SYSTEM
I
can remember reading for the
first time many years ago
about a child who had to
live in a large
plastic
`bubble"
because he was born with
virtually no major immune defenses. The
condition he had is very
rare
and
is' called severe
combined immunodeficiency
disease. He
lived in the bubble because it
was germ
free--exposure
to microorganisms in the genera
environment would have been
fatal. Transplants of healthy
bone
marrow tissue early in the child's life
can cure this disorder. More common
inborn immune
deficiencies
involve the absence of only
part of the system and can
sometimes be treated with
injections.
What
is the immune system anyway? Let's
take a detailed look.
The
Immune System
You
may not realize it,
but wars are raging
inside your body. They
happen continuously, every
day. Most of
the
time they are minor skirmishes,
and you are unaware of
them. When they become major
battles,
however,
you are usually aware
something's going on. The
"good guys" are the organs
and cells that
make
up
your immune system. This system
fights to defend the body against
foreign" invaders, such as
bacteria
and
viruses.
The
immune system is quite remarkable.
Scientists knew little about this intricate
and enormously important
system
until the 1970s. But it is
now the subject of major research
efforts, and new information
about how
the
immune system functions is emerging
rapidly. We know, for
instance, that this system is
highly sensitive
to
invasions by foreign matter
and is able to distinguish between
"self," or normal body
constituents, and
"not
self--friend and foe.
Antigens
When
the body recognizes something as a
"not self" invader, the immune
system mobilizes body
resources
and
attacks. Any substance that
can trigger an immune response is called
an antigen. Bacteria and
viruses are
recognized
as invaders by tell-tale aspects of their
protein coats and
DNA.
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Psychology PSY408
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What
triggers an immune response? Some of the
first antigens that come to
mind are bacteria,
fungi,
protozoa,
and viruses. Bacteria are
microorganisms that exist in
vast numbers throughout
the
environment--in
rivers and oceans, in the
air, on and in plants and
animals, and in decaying
organic matter.
Billions
of them may populate just one
pound of rotting garbage.
Because they help in breaking
down
organic
matter into simpler units, their
activities are essential to the
life and growth of all
living things. Some
bacteria
cause illnesses, such as
tuberculosis, scarlet fever,
and food poisoning. They do this by
growing
rapidly
and competing with our cells
for nutrients and by excreting
toxic, or poisonous, substances
that
destroy
our cells or impair their
metabolic processes.
Although
treatment with antibiotics kills
bacteria, these drugs are
becoming less effective because they
have
been
overused and bacteria are
developing drug-resistant
strains.
Fungi
are organisms, such as molds
and yeasts, which attach to
an organic host and absorb
nutrients from
the
host. Some of them can cause
skin diseases through direct contact, as
occurs in ringworm and
athlete's
foot,
and internal diseases
through inhalation of contaminated
air. Other fungi are very
beneficial-- for
example&
penicillin is derived from molds
(AMA, 1989). Protozoa are
one-celled organisms, such
as
amoebas,
that live primarily in water
and insects. Drinking water
contaminated with protozoa
can cause
amoebic
dysentery, an intestinal illness, and
being bitten by an infected mosquito can
cause malaria.
The
tiniest antigens are viruses,
particles of protein and
nucleic acid that are
smaller than cells and,
strictly
speaking,
may not even be alive.
They consist of genetic
information that allows them to
reproduce. A virus
functions
by attaching to a cell, slipping
inside, and taking over by
issuing its own genetic
instructions. The
invaded
cell abandons its own
metabolic activities and becomes a
"factory" for making viruses. In
short
order,
enough viruses can be produced to rupture
the cell and spread to
infect other cells. Viruses
can be
quite
devious, too, developing new
strains and lying dormant in
the body for periods of time
before
becoming
infectious. They are responsible for a
variety of diseases, including flu,
herpes, measles, and
polio.
The
immune system also tends to
recognize the tissue of an organ
transplant as "not self" and treat it as
an
antigen.
This is what physicians mean when they
say that the body "rejected"
a transplant. There are two
basic
ways to encourage transplant acceptance.
The first is to select the transplant
carefully so that the
tissues
of the donor and the recipient are
closely matched. The closer
the genetic relationship between
the
two
people, the better the match is likely to
be. Identical twins provide the
best match, of course.
The
second
approach uses drugs to
suppress the immune system so it won't
mobilize and reject the
organ. A
drawback
to this approach is that long-term
suppression of immune function leaves the
patient susceptible
to
disease.
For
many people, the immune system mounts an
attack against normally
harmless substances, such
as
pollen,
tree molds, poison ivy,
animal dander, and particular foods.
These people suffer from allergies;
the
specific
substances that trigger their
allergic reactions, such as
sneezing and skin rashes,
are called allergens.
Most
allergic people react to some,
but not all, of the known
allergens--someone with hay fever may
not be
allergic
to poison ivy, for instance.
Being allergic is partly determined by
heredity. Some allergies can
be
reduced
by administering regular, small doses of the
allergen, usually by
injection.
The
Organs of the Immune
System
The
organs of the immune system are
located throughout the body.
These organs are generally
referred to
as
lymphatic or lymphoid organs because they
have a primary role in the development
and deployment of
lymphocytes,
specific white blood cells
that are the key functionaries or
"soldiers" in our body's
defense
against
invasion by foreign matter. The main
lymphatic organs include the bone marrow, thymus,
lymph
nodes
and vessels, and
spleen.
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Health
Psychology PSY408
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Lymphocytes
originate in bone marrow, the soft tissue in the
core of all bones in the
body. Some of these
cells
migrate to one of two organs
where they mature. One of these
organs is the thymus, which, as we
saw
earlier,
is a gland that lies in the
chest. The other organ is
not known for certain,
but it is thought to
have
the
same function in maturing human
lymphocytes that a structure
called the "bursa" has in birds.
Most of
this
processing of lymphocytes occurs before
birth and in infancy.
The
lymph nodes are bean-shaped
masses of spongy tissue that
are distributed throughout the
body. Large
clusters
of them are found in the neck,
armpits, abdomen, and groin.
What do they do? Each lymph
node
contains
filters that capture
antigens and compartments
that provide a home base
for lymphocytes and
other
white blood cells.
Although
the lymph nodes and vessels
play an important role in cleansing
body cells of antigens, they
can
become
a liability in some forms of cancer
either by becoming infected with cancer
or by distributing cancer
cells
to other parts of the body
through the lymph and
blood.
Lymphocytes
and antigens that enter the
blood are carried to the
spleen, an organ in the upper left
side of
the
person's abdomen.
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