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Data Table
Below is a captured screen shot of the Virtual Pathology exercise case for Mononucleosis
Journal Questions
1--In what ways do
normal red and white blood cells differ?
When comparing red and white blood cells, we can
differentiate based on several characteristics, such as: quantity, function,
composition, and origin from the stem cells.
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QUANTITY
Looking first at the quantities found in a person having a
normal blood count, the red far outnumber the white blood cells. White blood
cells (WBC) together with platelets comprise just one (1) percent of a given
volume of whole blood compared to a 44 percent level of red blood cells (RBC).
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FUNCTION
Under the right conditions, RBC are the’ worker ants of the
blood’ that contain millions of proteins that tirelessly transport oxygen. In
fact, a single red blood cell “can carry up to 1.2 billion molecules of
oxygen.” [Human Biology textbook, p. 145] To a far lesser degree, the RBC
in the blood transport carbon dioxide from the tissues.
WBC are designed to fight infection and protect the body
when injured. These are the warriors of the bloodstream, the samurai who defend
against invaders and have a short lifespan. They sense a threat and emit
chemicals that create more WBC, calling in reinforcements when needed.
Sometimes the new WBC come from the storehouse of the spleen and sometimes they
are generated from the bone marrow. The WBC basically scour the body and “dine”
on fungi, bacteria and parasites.
There are two types
of WBC: granular and agranular. Neutrophils are the largest percentage of granular WBC and are
the first responders to the scene. Other granular WBC called Eosinophils are able to act like the
Lilliputians in Gulliver’s Travels who swarm and secure a larger giant. In this
case, rather than stake to the ground, they use enzymes to digest unwelcome
parasites. They also are responsible for chemical reactions that modulate
allergic reactions in the body. A third type of granulocyte is known as the Basophils, which release histamine and
help to bathe injured tissue in plasma released from nearby blood vessels.
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COMPOSITION
WBC are larger than RBC and are translucent-primarily
because they lack hemoglobin and contain nuclei; red blood cells do not have a
nucleus.
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ORIGIN FROM STEM CELLS
Mature red blood cells, also called “erythrocytes,” derive
from erythroblasts created from stem cells.
The clever design that cast out the nucleus gives the mature RBC a
unique dimpled shape that makes it flexible and able to squeeze into tiny blood
vessels.
All of the granular leukocytes (WBC) such as neutrophils, eosinophils
and basophils, originate from stem cells by way of “myeloblasts”.
There are two agranular leukocytes (WBC), with the Monocyte
originating from the Monoblasts, and the Lymphocytes originating from the
Lymphoblasts.
2.
Which type of white blood cell would you expect to be most common in a normal
blood smear?
Neutrophils are most commonly found
in a normal blood smear
3. A differential
count of white blood cells from a patient gave the absolute number of
lymphocytes as 8000 per mm3 and the total number of white blood cells as 12,000
per mm3. Calculate the percentage of lymphocytes in this sample of white blood
cells. Is this a normal or abnormal percentage? Explain your answer.
A normal
range of lymphocytes is the 20 to 40 percentile, so this an example of an
abnormally high percentage, in the neighborhood of 67 percent.
4. Describe the
difference between a communicable disease and an inherited disease. Use
examples you have studied in this exploration to support your description.
Essentially,
the difference between a communicable disease and an inherited disease is that you
can pass a communicable disease to others primarily through vectors such as
parasites, viruses, or bacteria via physical contact; transmission
often occurs through exposure to blood, saliva, fluid from the mucous membranes of the lungs and airways, and other body fluids.
Inherited
diseases are of course transmitted via the genetic roulette of procreation, but
having a genetic variation that fits the definition of a disease is dependent
on the cellular matrix unique to offspring and mutations in genetic code that persist generation to generation.
For example, research shows that people
with chronic myelogenous leukemia, which is one of those rare diseases characterized by the
bone marrow factories being overrun by abnormal and inefficient white blood
cells, have an abnormal chromosome as the causal factor. However, the boundary zone for leukemia origin between communicable and inherited is fuzzy; environmental exposures and even viral infections are thought to be the causal factors in some cases.
The person
cannot maintain the homeostasis and intricate symphony of balances that
normally keep white blood cell production in the proportion needed for good
health and a strong immune system.
5. Why are white
blood cells in a stained blood smear usually counted at low power under a
microscope? Explain your answer.
White blood cells are large
elements in a given blood sample so it would be like taking a close up photo of
a giraffe and only seeing a spot on the neck if you use the high power. Use the
low power magnification when examining a stained blood smear of white blood cells and you can see and count their numbers much like a camera with a wider lens will be able to capture not just the spot, but the entire neck of the giraffe as well
as the head, body and legs.
6. Why is the
presence of a larger than normal number of neutrophils indicative of an
infection? Explain your answer.
Neutrophils are the first line of defense and as such, they aggressively outnumber and basically engulf a foreign body or invader such as bacteria or virus before it can spend much time or do much damage. When they mass, this is a sure sign of an infection, of the immune system working as designed to thwart what does not belong.
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7. Why would you not expect to see tissue
macrophages in a blood smear? Explain your answer.
Macrophages
are a type of large white blood cell that are like the trash trucks that come
by to remove the red blood cells that reached their expiration date of 120
days. The liver and spleen are where old RBC get destroyed. Much like the neutrophils
engulf foreign bacteria or viruses, the macrophages engulf the no longer useful
RBC and digest them. It’s a process called “phagocytosis” and it’s a housekeeping
duty our bodies perform at the cellular level.
Blood
smears are a snapshot of what is going on in the bloodstream. Since the old red
blood cells are more or less sequestered in the liver and spleen for this
housekeeping, the macrophages typically won’t be visible in a blood smear.
Very nicely done. I liked reading your report especially the detail comparing white and red blood cells.
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