Biology, asked by justinwembly7989, 8 months ago

An experiment to demonstrate haemolysis in a blood cell

Answers

Answered by eandrisharma
16

Answer:

By placing red blood cells in solutions of differing osmolarities and tonicities, this experiment demonstrates the effects of osmosis and the resultant changes in cell volume. ... No change in cell volume occurs in isotonic NaCl, and, by placing blood cells in hypotonic NaCl, incomplete hemolysis occurs.

Answered by Jasleen0599
1

An experiment to demonstrate haemolysis in a blood cell

  • Your doctor will use a microscope to examine your red blood cells for this test. Red blood cells' typical shape can shift in some forms of hemolytic anaemia. the Coombs test. This test might reveal whether your body is producing proteins called antibodies that attack red blood cells.
  • Haemolysis is a multistage process with each permeant (glycerol, propylene glycol, ethylene glycol, urea, and water). Swelling, bursting, volume reduction perhaps followed by ion leakage, and then haemoglobin leaking are the stages.
  • Red blood cells are destroyed more quickly than they can be produced in hemolytic anaemia. Hemolysis, or the breakdown of red blood cells, is a medical term. All areas of your body receive oxygen thanks to red blood cells.
  • There are numerous factors that might lead to hemolysis, such as erythrocyte exposure to toxins and poisons, bacterial haemolysins, immunological responses such certain complement-fixing antibodies, hypotonicity, temperature changes, and medical procedures like hemodialysis.
  • The Coombs test, also known as antiglobulin testing, is an immunology laboratory procedure used to identify the existence of antibodies against the body's circulating red blood cells (RBCs), which cause hemolysis.

#SPJ2

Similar questions