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Encyclopedia of Health and Medicine

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The Blood <strong>and</strong> Lymph 119<br />

marrow also warehouses minerals it requires for<br />

cell synthesis <strong>and</strong> the bones need for STRENGTH <strong>and</strong><br />

growth, such as calcium. As well, the bone marrow<br />

stores B-cell lymphocytes <strong>and</strong> plasma cells,<br />

leukocytes integral to the body’s IMMUNE RESPONSE.<br />

Oxygen transport: erythrocytes The erythrocytes,<br />

also called red blood cells (RBCs), pick up<br />

oxygen molecules in the LUNGS <strong>and</strong> carry them to<br />

the cells. After delivering the oxygen, the erythrocytes<br />

then retrieve carbon dioxide molecules, the<br />

waste byproducts <strong>of</strong> cellular METABOLISM, <strong>and</strong> cart<br />

them back to the lungs for elimination from the<br />

body through respiration. This OXYGEN–CARBON<br />

DIOXIDE EXCHANGE is the foundation <strong>of</strong> the body’s<br />

survival. No cells in the body can survive longer<br />

than 10 to 15 minutes (three to five minutes for<br />

BRAIN <strong>and</strong> heart cells) without oxygen.<br />

Erythrocytes acquire their capacity to carry<br />

oxygen from the pigmented protein HEMOGLOBIN,<br />

which is high in iron. The pigment also gives erythrocytes<br />

their red color. The iron hemoglobin<br />

contains allows the hemoglobin to bind with the<br />

oxygen molecules. A healthy, normal erythrocyte<br />

contains about 300 million molecules <strong>of</strong> hemoglobin;<br />

each molecule <strong>of</strong> hemoglobin can bind with<br />

four molecules <strong>of</strong> oxygen. Iron enters the body<br />

from dietary sources. Iron deficiency is the most<br />

common cause <strong>of</strong> ANEMIA, a condition in which<br />

the blood cannot meet the body’s oxygenation<br />

needs.<br />

Erythrocytes are concave on both sides, giving<br />

them the FLEXIBILITY to nearly fold in half to<br />

squeeze through the narrowest <strong>of</strong> the body’s blood<br />

vessels, the arterioles, venules, <strong>and</strong> capillaries. As<br />

well, erythrocytes lack nuclei, the “comm<strong>and</strong>”<br />

structures common to cells that contain deoxyribonucleic<br />

acid (DNA). DNA gives the cell its replication<br />

instructions; without it a cell cannot<br />

reproduce. The absence <strong>of</strong> a nucleus further aids<br />

the erythrocyte’s flexibility, however, which is<br />

most important for delivering oxygen deep within<br />

the body’s tissues.<br />

Because erythrocytes cannot proliferate, the<br />

red bone marrow churns out a steady supply <strong>of</strong><br />

new ones, releasing them into the circulation at a<br />

rate <strong>of</strong> 2 to 3 million per second. Erythrocytes<br />

enter the bloodstream in a slightly immature<br />

stage, called reticulocytes. They reach full maturity<br />

after about 24 hours in circulation <strong>and</strong> live in<br />

the bloodstream for 110 to 120 days, after which<br />

the SPLEEN filters them from the blood <strong>and</strong> breaks<br />

them down (hemolyzes) into their component<br />

structures. The LIVER further metabolizes the components<br />

<strong>of</strong> hemolyzed erythrocytes, recycling their<br />

ingredients for use in synthesizing new erythrocytes<br />

as well as to manufacture BILE <strong>and</strong> other biochemical<br />

substances. Macrophages within the<br />

liver, migratory monocytes called Kupffer cells,<br />

then consume whatever remains <strong>of</strong> the erythrocytic<br />

waste.<br />

Stop the bleeding: platelets The smallest cell<br />

elements in the blood, platelets, are encased in<br />

protein coatings that become adhesive (sticky)<br />

when chemical messengers released at the site <strong>of</strong><br />

bleeding enter the bloodstream. The chemicals<br />

activate PLATELET AGGREGATION, in which platelets<br />

swarm to the site <strong>of</strong> bleeding <strong>and</strong> stick to each<br />

other as well as to the collagen fibers at the site to<br />

form a hemostatic plug. This activation also<br />

enables platelets to change shape, elongating or<br />

contracting as necessary to bridge the gaps among<br />

the collagen fibers to form a weblike structure that<br />

ensnares other cells <strong>and</strong> substances. As the coagulation<br />

cascade unfolds the plug exp<strong>and</strong>s <strong>and</strong> hardens,<br />

eventually forming the clot that halts the<br />

bleeding. On the surface <strong>of</strong> the SKIN, this clot is a<br />

scab. Within a blood vessel, it is a thrombus.<br />

Platelets arise from the largest cells in the red<br />

bone marrow, megakaryocytes, <strong>and</strong> actually are<br />

fragments <strong>of</strong> megakaryocytic cytoplasm rather<br />

than independent cells. They are irregularly<br />

shaped <strong>and</strong> loosely defined, a structure ideally<br />

suited to their purpose. Platelets also lack nuclei<br />

<strong>and</strong> live in the circulation for about 10 days.<br />

Roughly a third <strong>of</strong> the body’s total platelet volume<br />

resides in the spleen, which releases them into the<br />

circulating blood in response to bleeding.<br />

Defend <strong>and</strong> protect: leukocytes The leukocytes,<br />

also called white blood cells (WBCs), are the foundation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the body’s IMMUNE RESPONSE. They take<br />

one <strong>of</strong> three forms: LYMPHOCYTE, MONOCYTE, or<br />

GRANULOCYTE. Each has specialized functions<br />

within the immune response. Lymphocytes attack<br />

invading pathogens, <strong>and</strong> monocytes <strong>and</strong> granulocytes<br />

consume the remains <strong>of</strong> the pathogenic<br />

invaders. Lymphocytes circulate primarily in the<br />

lymph. Monocytes circulate in the blood for about<br />

24 hours after the bone marrow releases them <strong>and</strong>

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