White Blood Cells
White Blood Cells
White Blood Cells
WBC = leukocyte
o protect against infection
o function in innate and adaptive immune system
o made in bone marrow
o short lifespan, constantly made
TYPES OF WBC
1. MACROPHAGES
- innate immune system (1st responders)
- 3-7% of circulating WBCS
- monocytes mature into macrophages
function: phagocytosis, create and secrete cytokines
reside in spleen, other organs
2. LYMPHOCYTES (AGRANULOCYTES)
- adaptive immune system (specific antigens with memory; long-term immunity)
- 20-35% of circulating WBCS
- T cells and B cells
- mature in lymphoid tissue: lymph nodes, tonsils, adenoids, thymus gland, spleen
B cells mature in bone marrow and develop into plasma cells in lymph
nodes
plasma cells = antibody producing
T cells mature in thymus gland T helper (CD4) and cytotoxic T (CD8)
3. GRANULOCYTES
- function: digestive enzymes in granules that kill and catabolize debris during
phagocytosis
- neutrophils, basophils, eosinophils
o neutrophils: 60-70% of circulating WBCS
1st responders
antigens, corticosteroids, epinephrine release neutrophils
polymorphonuclear leukocytes = mature neutrophils; lifespan 1-
2 days
mature = segs // immature = bands
immature neutrophils are released when circulating mature
neutrophils are exhausted
bands indicates immune system is working hard to create
enough WBCs
“shift to left” = high number of circulating bands
o eosinophils
1-6% of circulating WBCS
released during parasitic and allergic reactions
contain chemical mediators and enzymes: histamine
o basophils
<1% of circulating WBCS
released during infection, especially parasitic
contain chemical mediators: histamine, prostaglandin, leukotrienes,
heparin
CREATION & MATURATION
o come from pluripotent stem cells in bone marrow during hematopoiesis
o stem cells = myeloid and lymphoid
myeloid = granulocyte and monocyte
lymphoid = lymphocyte
o blast cells = immature precursor cells for each cell line
HEMATOPOIESIS
all blood cells derived from pluripotent stem cell and can become any kind of blood cell
pluripotent stem cell myeloid or lymphoid line
myeloid erythroblasts, myeloblasts, monoblasts, megakaryocytes mature cells
erythroblasts RBCs
myeloblasts and monoblasts different types of WBCs
megakaryocytes platelets
lymphoid lymphoblasts mature lymphocytes
PHAGOCYTOSIS
macrophage can move out of the capillary to engulf and capture an antigen with lysosomal
enzymes
INCREASES OR DECREASES IN WBC COUNT
causes for increase: infection, inflammation, extreme stress, neoplasms, bone marrow disorders
o leukocytosis = WBC > 11,000/µL
o neutrophils most common WBC affected (neutrophilia)
neutrophilia = >7,700/µL in total WBC < 11,000/µL
causes: infection, inflammation, malignancy, smoking, stress,
drugs (glucocorticoids, lithium, epinephrine)
monocyte leukocytosis = > 800/µL
monocytosis = increased monocytes + normal total WBC count
causes:leukemia, bacterial infection, TB
monocytopenia = low number of monocytes
o causes: steroids, malignancy
eosinophilia = > 600/µL
causes: allergy, parasitic infection, leukemia, toxins, drugs,
autoimmune diseases
basophilic leukocytosis = high number of basophils
causes: hypersensitivity/inflammatory reactions, parasitic
infection, hypothyroidism, UC, varicella virus
basopenia = low number of basophils
causes: malignancy
o leukemoid reaction = WBC > 50,000/µL from causes other than leukemia
o causes: hemorrhage, specific infections, splenic dysfunction, organ necrosis
o leukopenia: WBC < 4,000/µL
o causes: anything that causes WBC destruction
o increases infection risk, decreases signs of infection, diminishes healing ability
o neutrophils are most common WBC
neutropenia = < 1,500/µL
causes: deficient bone marrow function, WBC destruction, neutrophil shift
into tissues
infections: bacterial, viral, parasitic
drugs: chemotherapy, chloramphenicol, phenothiazines,
allopurinol, carbamazepine, phenylbutazone
vitamin deficiences: megaloblastic anemia from B12 deficiency or
folate
bone marrow disease: leukemia, myelodysplastic syndrome,
aplastic anemia, myelofibrosis, any cause of bone marrow
suppression
radiation
machinery: hemodialysis, cardiac bypass
congenital disorders of bone marrow or neutrophil production or
from drugs stimulating immune system to attack cells: Kostmann
syndrome
autoimmune destruction of neutrophils: Felty’s syndrome
hypersplenism
T lymphocytopenia = decreased T cells but normal levels for other
lymphocytes
causes: HIV, inherited disorder, infection, radiation, chemotherapy
B lymphocytopenia = too few B cells but normal levels for other
lymphocytes
causes: immunosuppressants
NK lymphocytopenia = too few natural killer cells but normal levels of
other lymphocytes
o leukocytosis = increase in lymphocytes
o normally T cells decrease with age
child: < 3,000/µL
adult: < 1,500/µL
elderly: < 1,400/µL
WBC DIFFERENTIAL NORMAL RANGES (4.1-10.9 x 10^3/µL)
o polymorphonuclear 35-80%
o immature polys 0-10%
o lymphocytes 20-50%
o monocytes 2-12%
o eosinophils 0-7%
o basophils 0-2%
LYMPHATIC SYSTEM
tonsils, cervical lymph nodes, entrance of thoracic duct into subclavian vein, thymus gland, right
lymphatic duct, axillary lymph nodes, thoracic duct, spleen, Peyer’s patches in intestinal wall,
inguinal lymph nodes, red bone marrow