Clinical Medicine Hematology
1. EDTA: Whats used in specimen tubes to prevent blood coagulating
2. eosinophils, basophils, neutrophils,: what makes up granulocytes
3. plasma - clotting factors: what is serum
4. proteins, fats, nutrients, electrolytes, glucose, transport proteins, im-
munoglobulins, clotting factors, enzymes, small amount of CO2 and O2: what
does plasma contain
5. Acute phase reactants, proteins: What does APR stand for
6. change serum concentration by >25% in response to inflammatory cytokines
(which are part of innate immune system): What does an APR do
7. born with it, reacts to pathogens the body hasn't seen before: what is the innate
immune system
8. substances that get WBCs moving and regulate immune response when
stress on body: what is a cytokine for
9. can be categorized as negative meaning they decrease serum concentration
,or positive meaning they increase serum concentration: APRs can be categorized as
meaning they or meaning they
10. multipotent hematopoietic stem cells: dark blue
11. common myeloid progenitor: light blue
12. megakaryocyte -> platelets: light orange
13. basophils --> mast cell; neutrophil; eosinophil: yellow
,14. myeloblast: dark orange
15. monocyte -> macrophage: grey
16. NK cell: black
17. small lymphocyte --> T and B lymphocyte
B lymphocyte --> plasma cell: green
18. bone marrow, bone marrow, thymus: B lymphocytes are produced in the and T lymphocytes
are produced in the but mature in the
19. RBC, platelets, WBC: order of blood components by quantity
20. have granules that release and control inflammation: describe what basophils do
, 21. a little bigger than a RBC and nucleus about the size of an RBC: describe what a
lymphocyte looks like
22. circulation, spleen, lymph nodes; survey for pathogens: where do lymphocytes go after
maturation and what do they do there
23. 4 pyrrole rings which together hold a reduced iron (Fe+2): describe what heme is
made of
24. 4 polypeptide subunits: describe what globin is made of
1. EDTA: Whats used in specimen tubes to prevent blood coagulating
2. eosinophils, basophils, neutrophils,: what makes up granulocytes
3. plasma - clotting factors: what is serum
4. proteins, fats, nutrients, electrolytes, glucose, transport proteins, im-
munoglobulins, clotting factors, enzymes, small amount of CO2 and O2: what
does plasma contain
5. Acute phase reactants, proteins: What does APR stand for
6. change serum concentration by >25% in response to inflammatory cytokines
(which are part of innate immune system): What does an APR do
7. born with it, reacts to pathogens the body hasn't seen before: what is the innate
immune system
8. substances that get WBCs moving and regulate immune response when
stress on body: what is a cytokine for
9. can be categorized as negative meaning they decrease serum concentration
,or positive meaning they increase serum concentration: APRs can be categorized as
meaning they or meaning they
10. multipotent hematopoietic stem cells: dark blue
11. common myeloid progenitor: light blue
12. megakaryocyte -> platelets: light orange
13. basophils --> mast cell; neutrophil; eosinophil: yellow
,14. myeloblast: dark orange
15. monocyte -> macrophage: grey
16. NK cell: black
17. small lymphocyte --> T and B lymphocyte
B lymphocyte --> plasma cell: green
18. bone marrow, bone marrow, thymus: B lymphocytes are produced in the and T lymphocytes
are produced in the but mature in the
19. RBC, platelets, WBC: order of blood components by quantity
20. have granules that release and control inflammation: describe what basophils do
, 21. a little bigger than a RBC and nucleus about the size of an RBC: describe what a
lymphocyte looks like
22. circulation, spleen, lymph nodes; survey for pathogens: where do lymphocytes go after
maturation and what do they do there
23. 4 pyrrole rings which together hold a reduced iron (Fe+2): describe what heme is
made of
24. 4 polypeptide subunits: describe what globin is made of