PRINCIPLES OF MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE 2
College of Allied Health Sciences
Bachelor of Science in Medical Laboratory Science
Second Semester, A.Y. 2022-2023
[TRANS] PMLS UNIT 3: PHLEBOTOMY-RELATED VASCULAR ANATOMY
OUTLINE
I Major Types of Blood Vessels - Arteries, Veins, Capillaries
II Major Arm and Leg Veins Used in Venipuncture
III Composition and Function of Blood
IV Types of Blood Specimens
MAJOR TYPES OF BLOOD VESSELS
Blood Vessels
o are channels through which blood is distributed to
body tissues
o 3 Major Types
Arteries
- Carry blood away from the heart MAJOR ARM AND LEG VEINS USED IN
o Wall: 3 layers VENIPUNCTURE
Tunica intima/interna –
Innermost 2 BASIC PATTERN ON VEINS
Made up of a single layer of H-pattern
endothelial cells with an o Median Cubital Vein
underlying basement The preferred venipuncture site. It is the
membrane, a connective easiest to access and least painful for the
tissue layer and an elastic patient.
internal membrane o Cephalic Vein
Tunica media – middle The second choice for venipuncture. It is
Made up of smooth muscle harder to palpate but is usually better when
tissue and some elastic drawing blood from an obese patient.
fibers. o Basilic Vein
Tunica externa/adventitia – The last-choice vein for venipuncture as it is
outermost not well anchored and punctures on this vein
Made up of connective are more painful
tissue. M-pattern
Thicker in arteries than in o Median vein (intermediate antebrachial vein)
veins. First-choice vein; safest and less painful
o Arterial blood - bright-red; scarlet o Median cephalic vein (intermediate cephalic vein)
o Have thick walls Second choice for venipuncture; less
likely to roll
Veins o Median basilic vein (intermediate basilic vein)
- Carry blood toward the heart Last choice vein because it is more painful
- Wall: same with arteries
- Have thinner walls
- Venous Blood: dark bluish red;
dark red; dull red or purple
Capillaries
- smallest and most numerous of the
blood vessels; are only one cell thick
Figure 1 H-pattern and M-pattern
OTHER VEINS
Veins on the back of the hand or wrist
H-Leg, ankle, and foot veins
FORGER, ANYA| CECILE HALL 1
TRANS: PMLS 2 Unit 3
- Globulin Defense (antibodies) and
- Fibrinogen lipid transport
Substances transported by blood
- Nutrients (glucose, fatty acids, amino acids,
vitamins)
- Waste products of metabolism (urea, uric acid)
- Respiratory gases (O2 and CO2)
- Hormones (steroids and thyroid hormone are
carried by plasma proteins)
FORMED ELEMENTS (CELLS)
Cell Type Number (per Functions
mm^3 of Blood)
Erythrocytes 4-6 million Transport
(RBCs) oxygen and help
transport carbon
Figure 2 Veins on the wrist dioxide
Leukocytes 4,800-10,800 Defense and
(WBCs) Immunity
Platelets 250,000 - 400,000 Blood Clotting
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND VOLUME
Blood Characteristics
Figure 3 Leg, ankle, and foot veins o Sticky, opaque fluid
o Heavier and thicker than water
o Color range
COMPOSITION AND FUNCTION OF THE BLOOD o Metallic, salty taste
Blood is the only fluid tissue, a type of connective tissue, o Blood pH is 7.35 and 7.45
in the human body. o Blood temperature is slightly higher than body
Function: Blood transports everything that must be temperature - 38ᵒC or 100.4ᵒF
carried from one place to another, such as nutrients, Blood Volume
wastes, hormones, and body heat. o About 5–6 liters, or about 6 quarts, of blood are found
Components of blood: in a healthy adult
o Formed Elements: 45% o Blood makes up 8 percent of body weight
Erythrocytes (RBCs)
Leukocytes (WBCs) WHITE BLOOD CELLS
Thrombocytes (Platelets)
o Plasma – 55% GRANULOCYTES
Neutrophils Most numerous type of
PLASMA WBCs
Segmented or
CONSTITUENT Major Functions multilobed nucleus
Water 90% of plasma volume; Fine-textured lavender
solvent for carrying other staining granules
substances; absorbs heat Eosinophils Contain blue-red
Salts (Electrolytes) Osmotic balance, pH nucleus.
- Sodium buffering, regulation of Brick red/crimson
- Potassium membrane permeability granules
- Calcium Two-lobed nucleus
- Magnesium Basophils Least numerous type of
- Chloride WBC:
- Bicarbonate Large histamine
Plasma Proteins Osmotic balance, pH containing dark blue-
- Albumin buffering Clotting of blood black staining granules
FORGER, ANYA| CECILE HALL 2
TRANS: PMLS 2 Unit 3
that often obscure a
typically S-shaped
nucleus.
AGGRANULOCYTES
Lymphocytes Second most numerous
types of WBC;
Typically has a large,
round, dark-purple
nucleus that occupies
most of the cell and is
surrounded by a thin rim
of pale-blue cytoplasm.
Monocytes Largest WBC.
U or kidney shaped
nucleus
Fine, gray-blue
cytoplasm and a large,
dark-staining nucleus
TYPES OF BLOOD SPECIMENS
Serum
o a clear, pale yellow fluid (nonfasting serum can be
cloudy due to lipids) separated from clotted blood by
centrifugation
o (-) fibrinogen
o many chemistry tests are performed on serum
Plasma
o a clear to slightly hazy, pale yellow fluid that
separates from the cells when blood in an
anticoagulant tube is centrifuged
o (+) fibrinogen
o Chemistry STAT tests (e.g. elecrolytes) – using
heparin as anticoagulant; Coagulation tests – using
citrate as anticoagulant
Whole Blood
o contains both cells and plasma, like blood in the
body
o collected in an anticoagulated tube
o most hematology tests (e.g. Complete Blood
Count, Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate);
Glycosylated hemoglobin
o POCT (STAT situations)
Figure 4
Figure 5
FORGER, ANYA| CECILE HALL 3