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6380471
Functions of Blood
Description
mindmap on functions of blood
No tags specified
organ transplant
phagocytosis
transport function of blood
biology
year 3
Mind Map by
Caramel Kitty
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Caramel Kitty
over 8 years ago
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Resource summary
Functions of Blood
Transport
Digested Food Substances
from intestines
to other parts of the body
Excretory Products
NItrogenous Wastes
urea, uric acid & creatinine
Carbon Dioxide
carried as hydrogencarbonate ions in plasma
from all parts of the body
to kidneys
to lungs where hydrogencarbonate ions are converted to carbon dioxide
excess mineral salts from intestines
Hormones
from glands
to target organs
Heat
from respiring body tissues
e.g. muscles
to all parts of body
to maintain a uniform body temperature
Oxygen
from lungs
to all parts of the body for cellular respiration
Protect
Blood Clotting
blood exposed to air will soon clot
seals the wound
prevent excessive loss of blood
prevent foreign particles from entering bloodstream
blood vessels are damaged
damaged tissues & blood platelets release thrombokinase (enzyme)
thrombokinase converts prothrombin (protein present in plasma) into thrombin (enzyme)
calcium ions must be present
thrombin catalyses the conversion of fibrinogen (soluble protein) to fibrin (insoluble threads)
fibrin threads entangle blood cells & the whole mass forms a clot
heparin (produced in liver) is an anti-clotting substance
Phagocytosis
process of engulfing or ingesting foreign particles, such as bacteria, by the white blood cells
can destroy foreign particles that enter the blood (e.g. bacteria that enter a wound)
engulfs the bacteria by flowing over them & enclosing them
ingested bacteria will be digested in the phagocyte
dead phagocytes killed by bacteria
dead phagocytes + dead bacteria = pus
Production of Antibodies
disease-causing organisms (pathogens) e.g. bacteria & viruses enter bloodstream
stimulate lymphocytes to produce antibodies
destroy bacteria e.g. attaching to them, causing the bacterial surface membrane to rupture
cause bacteria to clump together or agglutinate so that they can be easily ingested by phagocytes
neutralising harmful substances (toxins) produced by bacteria
antibodies may stay in blood long after disease has been overcome
thus, person who has recovered becomes immune/resistant to that infection
some types of dead bacteria are sometimes injected into the bodies of certain animals
to induce formation of antibodies in the blood
antibodies are extracted from animal's serum & injected into humans to protect them from certain diseases
may also be directly induced in the human body by exposing the person to dead/weakened forms of pathogen (immunisation/vaccination)
dead/weakened form of pathogen stimulates the person's system to produce antibodies against the pathogen
Organ Transplant & Tissue Rejection
tissue or organ transplant involves replacing damaged/diseased tissue/organ with healthy tissue/organ from the same person or donor
recipient's lypmphocytes may produce antibodies to destroy the transplanted organ
e.g. liver, kidney & heart
tissues must be as genetically close as possible to reduce risk of rejection
use of immunosuppressive drugs
inhibit the responses of the recipient's immune system
will cause problems
lower resistance to many kinds of infection
recipient has to continue taking the drugs for the rest of their lives
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