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The Bloody Facts A Presentation All About Blood Blood Typing Take two drops of blood and treat them with antigen reagent. Put anti-A antibodies on one drop. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The%20Bloody%20Facts


1
The Bloody Facts
  • A Presentation All About Blood

2
Brief Composition of Blood
  • What is blood made up of?
  •  
  • Adult human has about 46 liters of blood.
  • Several types of cells floating in fluid called
    plasma.
  • Red blood cells contain hemoglobin,
    oxygen-binding protein. Red blood cells transport
    oxygen to, and remove carbon dioxide from, the
    body tissues.
  • The white blood cells fight infection.
  • The platelets help blood to clot.
  • The plasma contains salts and various kinds of
    proteins.

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Blood Tissue Slide
5
Oxygen Transport
6
Four globin chains (two alpha chains and two beta
chains) Each globin chain contains small, heme
group. In center of each heme is an iron (Fe)
atom. Black dots on two beta chains (green and
yellow) show location of the HbS (sickle-cell)
mutation.
7
Sickle Cell Anemia
8
  • Hemoglobin Mutants
  • Missense, Nonsense, and Frameshift

9
Blood Groups, Typing, Transfusions
  • Experiments with blood transfusions carried out
    for hundreds of years and many patients died from
    blood poisoning.
  • In 1901, Austrian Karl Landsteiner discovered
    human blood groups.
  • Landsteiner discovered that blood clumping was an
    immunological reaction occurring when the
    receiver has antibodies against the donor blood
    cells.
  • Landsteiner's work made it possible to determine
    blood types and paved the way for blood
    transfusions to be carried out safely.
  • For this discovery he was awarded the Nobel Prize
    in Physiology or Medicine in 1930.
  • Landsteiner was involved in the discovery of both
    the AB0 and Rh blood groups.

10
Charles Drew
  • born on June 3, 1904 in Washington, D.C.
  • He wrote a dissertation on "Banked Blood" in
    which he
  • described a technique he developed for the
    long-term
  • preservation of blood plasma.
  • Prior to his discovery, blood could not be stored
    for more than
  • two days because of the rapid breakdown of
    red blood cells.
  • Drew had discovered that by separating the plasma
    (the liquid part of blood) from the whole blood
    (in which the red blood cells exist) and then
    refrigerating them separately, they could be
    combined up to a week later for a blood
    transfusion.
  • He also discovered that while everyone has a
    certain type of blood (A, B, AB, or O) and thus
    are prevented from receiving a full blood
    transfusion from someone with different blood,
    everyone has the same type of plasma.
  • Thus, in certain cases where a whole blood
    transfusion is not necessary, it was sufficient
    to give a plasma transfusion which could be
    administered to anyone, regardless of their blood
    type.
  • http//www.pbs.org/wnet/redgold/innovators/bio_dre
    w.html

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  • Drew became the first African-American to receive
    a Doctor of Medical Science degree from Columbia
    and was now gaining a reputation worldwide.
  • As World War II was breaking out in Europe, Drew
    was named the Supervisor of the Blood Transfusion
    Association for New York City and oversaw its
    efforts towards providing plasma to the British
    Blood Bank.
  • He was later named a project director for the
    American Red Cross but soon resigned his post
    after the United States War Department issued a
    directive that blood taken from White donors
    should be segregated from that of Black donors.
  • Charles Drew died on April 1, 1950 in Burlington
    NC when the automobile he was driving went out of
    control and turned over. Drew suffered extensive
    massive injuries but contrary to popular legend
    was not denied a blood transfusion by an
    all-White hospital - he indeed received a
    transfusion but was beyond the help of the
    experienced physicians attending to him. His
    family later wrote letters to those physicians
    thanking them for the care they provided.
  • Over the years, Drew has been considered one of
    the most honored and respected figures in the
    medical field and his development of the blood
    plasma bank has given a second chance of live to
    millions.

12
What are Blood Types?
  • Differences in human blood due to presence or
    absence of carbohydrate molecules called antigens
    and antibodies on the cells surface.
  • Antigens located on surface of RBC and antibodies
    are in blood plasma.
  • A and B are co-dominant.
  • O blood is recessive to A and B.
  • Positive Blood is dominant to Negative.
  • Individuals have different types and combinations
    of these molecules which are inherited
  • One allele from mother and one from the father
  • Located on Chromosome 9

13
ABO blood groups
  • AB0 blood grouping system
  • According to the AB0 blood typing system there
    are four different kinds of blood types A, B, AB
    or 0 (null).  
  •  
  • Blood group AA antigens and anti-B antibodies
  •  
  •    
  • Blood group BB antigens and anti-A antibodies
  •  
  •    
  • Blood group ABBoth A and B antigens, neither
    anti-A nor anti-B antibodies
  •  
  •    
  • Blood group 0Neither A nor B antigens, both
    anti-A and anti-B antibodies
  •  

14
Rh Factor
  •    
  • If people have the antigen they are called Rh.
    Those who haven't are called Rh-.
  • A person with Rh- blood does not have Rh
    antibodies naturally in the blood plasma (as one
    can have A or B antibodies).
  • But a person with Rh- blood can develop Rh
    antibodies in the blood plasma if he or she
    receives blood from a person with Rh blood,
    whose Rh antigens can trigger the production of
    Rh antibodies.
  • A person with Rh blood can receive blood from a
    person with Rh- blood without any problems.
  • 85 of all people are Rh
  • 15 of all people are Rh-
  •  
  •  

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Blood Typing
  • Take two drops of blood and treat them with
    antigen reagent.
  • Put anti-A antibodies on one drop.
  • Put anti-B antibodies on the second drop.
  • If first drop agglutinates, then the person has
    the A antigen and likely has A blood
  • If it does not then they could have B or O blood.
  • If the second drop agglutinates, then the person
    has the B antigen also thus AB blood
  • If it did not clot for A and only B then they
    have B blood.
  • If neither drop agglutinates, they have no
    antigens and thus O blood.

45
Why is agglutination bad?
  • What is happening when the blood clumps or
    agglutinates?
  • 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 also crack and its 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.

46
Blood Transfusions
  • Blood transfusions who can receive blood
    fromwhom?
  •   People with blood group 0 are called "universal
    donors" and people with blood group AB are called
    "universal receivers."
  • The transfusion will work if a person who is
    going to receive blood has a blood group that
    doesn't have any antibodies against the donor
    blood's antigens. But if a person who is going to
    receive blood has antibodies matching the donor
    blood's antigens, the red blood cells in the
    donated blood will clump.

47
Who can give to whom?
48
Blood typing Game
  • http//nobelprize.org/medicine/educational/landste
    iner/index.html

49
Frequencies of Blood Types
50
Are all blood types equal?
  • Some evidence that blood groups confer protection
    or susceptibility to a wide range of human
    diseases. Groups A and AB are more susceptible to
    smallpox.
  • group A is associated with stomach cancer while
    group O has an increased likelihood of developing
    duodenal ulcers and more likely to be killed by
    the plague but resistant to flukes and worms
  • Blood group A more adapted to agrarian diet
  • Blood group B more adapted to high altitude
    greater fertility in women

51
Evolution?
  • THE ABO STUDIES of the APESChimpanzees - have
    the blood types A and minimal O, but never B.
  • Gorillas - have the blood types B and minimal
    O, but never A.There is NO blood type AB in
    chimps or gorillas.
  • But man has both A and B AND blood type AB as
    well as very much O.

52
Blood Type Diet?
  • Eat Right For Your Type by Peter DAdamo, ND, -
    people with different blood types respond
    differently to specific foods.
  • Rooted in evolutionary theory observation -
    different blood types emerged as environmental
    conditions and eating styles changed.
  • Between 50,000 BC and 25,000 BC, all humans
    shared Blood Type O. (Skilled hunters who
    thrived on a meat-based diet).
  • Type A blood type emerged between 25,000 BC and
    15,000 BC, an adaptation to more agrarian
    lifestyle. Climatic changes in Himalayan
    mountains led to appearance of Type B the
    blending of Type A and Type B blood types in
    modern civilization resulted in appearance of the
    Type AB blood type.
  • Dr. DAdamo believes that key to optimal health
    is to eat as our ancestors with the same blood
    type ate. DAdamo recommends that people with
    Type O blood eat diet rich in meat and people
    with Type A blood follow a grain-based, low-fat,
    vegetarian diet.

53
Bibliography
http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/units/basics/blood/
types.cfm
http//www.dadamo.com/
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood
http//www.hhmi.org/cgi-bin/askascientist/highligh
t.pl?kw fileanswers2Fimmunology2Fans_034.html
http//health.howstuffworks.com/blood.htm
http//anthro.palomar.edu/blood/ABO_system.htm
http//users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyP
ages/B/Blood.html http//www.biology.arizona.edu/
Human_Bio/problem_sets/blood_types/Intro.html
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