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White Blood Cells
Red Blood Cells
Blood typing
Hemostasis
100

The types of antigen(s) that blood type O has

None!

100

Term for low white blood cell count

Leukopenia

100

The site of RBC death

The spleen

100

List the blood types (no Rh factor)

A, B, AB, O

100

The main function of hemostasis

To stop bleeding

200

The amount of oxygens one hemoglobin can carry

4

200

What are Neutrophils, Basophils, Eosinophils?

Granulocytes

200

Term for high red blood cell count

Polycythemia

200

The two types of agglutinins

anti-A and anti-B (antibodies)

200

Function of a procoagulant

Clotting factor, clot the blood

300

This type of feedback is used during hemostasis 

Positive feedback

300

This WBC level rises in response to viral infections

Monocytes

300

Stimuli for increased erythropoiesis

High altitude, hypoxemia, increase in exercise
300

This happens during a mismatched transfusion reaction and antibodies attach to multiple foreign antigens

Agglutination

300

Immediate protection and response against blood loss

Vascular spasm

400

This coats non-broken vessels to prevent platelet sticking

Prostacyclin
400

List the 5 leukocytes from most to least abundant

Neutrophils, Lymphocytes, Monocytes, Eosinophils, Basophils

400

This is the last cell type in erythropoiesis that contains a nucleus

Erythroblast

400

The universal donor and receiver

Donor: Type O-, Receiver: Type AB+

400

This is revealed to make the platelets stick to the walls of broken vessels

Collagen

500

Most common type of hemophilia

Hemophilia A

500

The place where WBC spend most of their lifetime if not being used

Connective tissue

500

Reasons women's hematocrit is lower than men's

Androgens (testosterone) make more RBCS, loss from menstrual cycle, hematocrit inversely proportional to fat (women have higher average BF%)

500
The blood types of mother and baby that causes hemolytic disease of the newborn

Mom: Rh-, *second* baby: Rh+

500

Draw the extrinsic and intrinsic pathway of coagulation

Here’s the arrow-only version based exactly on your diagram:

Extrinsic

Tissue damage → Factor III → Factor X

Intrinsic

Platelets → Factor XII → Factor X

Common

Factor X → Prothrombin Activator
Prothrombin → Thrombin
Fibrinogen → Fibrin
Fibrin → Clot