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Ch. 23 Circulation
Taylor - Campbell Biology: Concepts & Connections 10th Edition
Taylor, Simon, Dickey, Hogan10th EditionCampbell Biology: Concepts & ConnectionsISBN: 9780136538783Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 23, Problem 13

Here is a blood sample that has been spun in a centrifuge. List, as completely as you can, the components you would find in the straw-colored fluid at the top of this tube and in the dense red portion at the bottom. Centrifuged blood sample showing straw-colored plasma above and dense red cells below.

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Identify the straw-colored fluid at the top of the tube as plasma.
List the components found in plasma: water, proteins (such as albumin, globulins, and fibrinogen), electrolytes (such as sodium, potassium, calcium, bicarbonate), nutrients (such as glucose, amino acids, lipids), hormones, and waste products (such as urea, creatinine).
Identify the dense red portion at the bottom of the tube as the packed red blood cells (erythrocytes).
Note that the white layer between the plasma and the red blood cells is the buffy coat, which contains white blood cells (leukocytes) and platelets (thrombocytes).
Summarize the components: Plasma (top layer) contains water, proteins, electrolytes, nutrients, hormones, and waste products; the buffy coat (middle layer) contains white blood cells and platelets; the packed red blood cells (bottom layer) contain erythrocytes.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Blood Components

Blood is composed of several key components, primarily plasma and formed elements. Plasma, the liquid portion, makes up about 55% of blood volume and contains water, electrolytes, proteins, hormones, and waste products. The formed elements include red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets, which are crucial for oxygen transport, immune response, and clotting, respectively.
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Centrifugation

Centrifugation is a laboratory technique that uses rapid spinning to separate components of a mixture based on density. In the case of blood, this process causes the denser red blood cells to settle at the bottom of the tube, while the lighter plasma remains on top. This separation allows for the analysis of different blood components and their respective functions.
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Plasma Composition

Plasma is a straw-colored fluid that serves as the medium for transporting various substances throughout the body. It contains proteins such as albumin, globulins, and fibrinogen, which play roles in maintaining osmotic pressure, immune function, and blood clotting. Additionally, plasma carries nutrients, waste products, gases, and hormones, making it essential for homeostasis and overall health.
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Related Practice
Textbook Question

If blood were supplied to all of the body's capillaries at one time,

a. Blood pressure would fall dramatically.

b. Resistance to blood flow would increase.

c. Blood would move too rapidly through the capillaries.

d. The amount of blood returning to the heart would increase.

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Textbook Question
If a blood clot forms inside a vein in the leg, it may travel through the circulatory system. What is the first capillary bed the clot would reach, where it might block blood flow?
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Textbook Question
Explain how the structure of capillaries relates to their function of exchanging substances with the surrounding interstitial fluid. Describe how that exchange occurs.
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Textbook Question
Some babies are born with a small hole in the wall between the left and right ventricles. How might this affect the oxygen content of the blood pumped out of the heart into the systemic circuit?
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Textbook Question
Juan has a disease in which damaged kidneys allow some of his normal plasma proteins to be removed from the blood. How might this condition affect the osmotic pressure of blood in capillaries, compared with that of the surrounding interstitial fluid? One of the symptoms of this kidney malfunction is an accumulation of excess interstitial fluid, which causes Juan's arms and legs to swell. Can you explain why this occurs?
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Textbook Question

The studies described in Module 23.6 were funded by both government agencies and major pharmaceutical and medical supply companies. NIH grants for research on heart disease total more than \$1.2 billion per year. Gather more information and form an opinion on how heart disease research should be funded, whether by private enterprises such as pharmaceutical companies, donor-supported nonprofit organizations, or government agencies. Write an essay arguing your point of view.

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