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COMPOSITION OF BLOOD
About 55 percent of the blood is composed of a liquid known
as plasma. The rest of the blood is made of three major
types of cells: red blood cells (also known as
erythrocytes), white blood cells (leukocytes), and platelets
(thrombocytes).
PLASMA
Plasma consists predominantly of water and salts. The
kidneys carefully maintain the salt concentration in plasma
because small changes in its concentration will cause cells
in the body to function improperly. In extreme conditions
this can result in seizures, coma, or even death. The pH of
plasma, the common measurement of the plasma’s acidity, is
also carefully controlled by the kidneys within the neutral
range of 6.8 to 7.7. Plasma also contains other small
molecules, including vitamins, minerals, nutrients, and
waste products. The concentrations of all of these molecules
must be carefully regulated.
Plasma is usually yellow in color due to proteins dissolved
in it. However, after a person eats a fatty meal, that
person’s plasma temporarily develops a milky color as the
blood carries the ingested fats from the intestines to other
organs of the body.
Plasma carries a large number of important proteins,
including albumin, gamma globulin, and clotting factors.
Albumin is the main protein in blood. It helps regulate the
water content of tissues and blood. Gamma globulin is
composed of tens of thousands of unique antibody molecules.
Antibodies neutralize or help destroy infectious organisms.
Each antibody is designed to target one specific invading
organism. For example, chicken pox antibody will target
chicken pox virus, but will leave an influenza virus
unharmed. Clotting factors, such as fibrinogen, are involved
in forming blood clots that seal leaks after an injury.
Plasma that has had the clotting factors removed is called
serum. Both serum and plasma are easy to store and have many
medical uses.
RED BLOOD CELLS
Red blood cells make up almost 45 percent of the blood
volume. Their primary function is to carry oxygen from the
lungs to every cell in the body. Red blood cells are
composed predominantly of a protein and iron compound,
called hemoglobin, that captures oxygen molecules as the
blood moves through the lungs, giving blood its red color.
As blood passes through body tissues, hemoglobin then
releases the oxygen to cells throughout the body. Red blood
cells are so packed with hemoglobin that they lack many
components, including a nucleus, found in other cells.
The membrane, or outer layer, of the red blood cell is
flexible, like a soap bubble, and is able to bend in many
directions without breaking. This is important because the
red blood cells must be able to pass through the tiniest
blood vessels, the capillaries, to deliver oxygen wherever
it is needed. The capillaries are so narrow that the red
blood cells, normally shaped like a disk with a concave top
and bottom, must bend and twist to maneuver single file
through
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