Rh factor
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Rh factor protein substance present in the red blood cells of most people, capable of inducing intense antigenic reactions. The Rh, or rhesus, factor was discovered in 1940 by K. Landsteiner and A. S. Wiener, when they observed that an injection of blood from a rhesus monkey into rabbits caused an antigenic reaction in the serum component of rabbit blood (see immunity ). When blood from humans was tested with the rabbit serum, the red blood cells of 85% of the humans tested agglutinated (clumped together). The red blood cells of the 85% (later found to be 85% of the white population and a larger percentage of blacks and Asians) contained the same factor present in rhesus monkey blood; such blood was typed Rh positive. The blood of the remaining 15% lacked the factor and was typed Rh negative. Under ordinary circumstances, the presence or lack of the Rh factor has no bearing on life or health. It is only when the two blood types are mingled in an Rh-negative individual that the difficulty arises, since the Rh factor acts as an antigen in Rh-negative persons, causing the production of antibodies. Besides the Rh factor, human red blood cells contain a large number of additional antigenic substances that have been classified into many blood group systems (see blood groups ); however, the Rh system is the only one, aside from the ABO system, that is of major importance in blood transfusions. If Rh-positive blood is transfused into an Rh-negative person, the latter will gradually develop antibodies called anti-Rh agglutinins, that attach to the Rh-positive red blood cells, causing them to agglutinate. Destruction of the cells (hemolysis) eventually results. If the Rh-negative recipient is given additional transfusions of Rh-positive blood, the concentration of anti-Rh agglutinins may become high enough to cause a serious or fatal reaction. The same type of immune reaction occurs in the blood of an Rh-negative mother who is carrying an Rh-positive fetus. (The probability of this situation occurring is high if the father is Rh positive.) Some of the infant's blood may enter the maternal circulation, causing the formation of agglutinins against the fetal red blood cells. The first baby is usually not harmed. But, if the mother's agglutinins pass into the circulation of subsequent fetuses, they may destroy the fetal red blood cells, causing the severe hemolytic disease of newborns known as erythroblastosis fetalis .
Author not available, RH FACTOR.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Chemical conversation: red blood cells send a signal that makes platelets less sticky.(This Week)
Science News; 7/21/2007; Webb, S.; 480 words
; Primarily known for their work hauling oxygen to tissues throughout the body, red blood cells may also play a part in regulating activities of another blood component. The cells can release a chemical that signals blood-clotting platelets to become less sticky and therefore less likely to clog a
Read more
|
|
The ABCs of blood cells.(MEDICAL MAILBOX)(Brief article)
Saturday Evening Post; 7/1/2007; SerVaas, Cory; 146 words
; Dear Dr. SerVaas, My sister has leukemia. Her blood is low and the doctor is giving her a shot every two weeks. I told her to eat some liver and take extra vitamin [B.sub.12] but the doctor said that wouldn't help. What will help her? Edna Watts Arley, Alabama We have three kinds of blood cells:
Read more
|
|
Microstructure chews on red blood cells. (Engineering News).(Brief Article)
Design News; 6/3/2002; 713 words
; ALBUQUERQUE, NM--Sandia National Laboratories has developed a Pac-Man-like microstructure with silicon microteeth that open and close to capture red blood cells. The development may impact future genetic research in applications such as mechanized microfluidic devices. The microjaws fit in a
Read more
|
|
Controversial 'blood doping' revisited. (research on whether injecting red blood cells improves athletic performance)
Science News; 5/30/1987; 296 words
; Controversial blood doping' revisited Injecting red blood cells to enhance aerobic capacity hasbeen both accepted and rejected in various studies as a viable way to improve athletic performance. But admissions by world-class athletes--including members of the victorious U.S. bicycling team in the
Read more
|
|
I know about white blood cells and how they eat germs and toxins. I've also learned about red blood cells, but I don't know what they do. What do red blood cells do?(Ask Doctor Cory)
U.S. Kids; 1/1/1998; SerVaas, Cory; 66 words
; Dear Elizabeth: Red blood cells, or erythrocytes (eh-RITH-row-sites), are tiny cells that look like doughnuts without the hole in the middle. There are about 250 million red blood cells in each drop of your blood. Their main job is to carry oxygen from the lungs to all of the body's cells. They
Read more
|
|
Micro Pac-Man. (Prototype).(nanotechnology device interacts with red blood cells)(Brief Article)
Poptronics; 2/1/2002; 526 words
; Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories have developed a micromachine that interacts with red blood cells. In less than a blink of an eye, its tiny silicon teeth open and close like jaws in a channel about one-third the width of a human hair. Think Pac-Man gobbling down those little dots. The
Read more
|
|
Shuttling medicines via blood cells. (Biomedicine).(using patient's own red blood cells to encapsulate steroids reduces side effects)(Brief Article)
Science News; 6/15/2002; 244 words
; People with chronic inflammatory disorders regularly take high doses of steroids over long periods. This anti-inflammatory therapy can relieve symptoms of cystic fibrosis, Crohn's disease, and other ailments but over time can lead to osteoporosis and diabetes. If lower steroid doses would fight
Read more
|
|
Red Blood Cells
Al Bawaba; 1/3/2007; 68 words
; Blood is made up of platelets, red blood cells and white blood cells; all floating in a yellowish liquid called plasma. Red blood cells carry oxygen from the lungs to every cell in the body. A normal red blood cell is shaped like a disk with a concave top and bottom. Because of its flexible outer
Read more
|
|
Become a laboratory investigation: detect the presence of nuclei in red blood cells.
Science Activities; 1/1/2003; Puckering, Amanda L. Synenki, Lauren R. Moore, Kristin Steapleton, Melissa Hammond, Paul Pomart, Katrina Sisken, Dorothy; 2585 words
; Abstract. In this article, the authors present lab exercises in which students use the microscope to study cells. After learning how to recognize the parts of a cell, differentiate between types of cells, and identify the nucleus, the students study blood samples from both familiar and unknown
Read more
|
|
Too many red blood cells create problems
Sun-Journal Lewiston, Me.; 9/26/2006; 791 words
; DEAR DR. DONOHUE: My husband just returned from the doctor with a possible diagnosis of polycythemia. Neither he nor I know anything about this. Would you tell us its significance? Is it a form of cancer? I suspect it might be. - W.B. ANSWER: Polycythemia (POWL-ee-sigh-THEME-ee-uh) isn't cancer. It
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Rh factor
A Dictionary of Zoology
Rh factor See RHESUS FACTOR .
Read more
|
|
Rh blood-group system
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... according to presence or absence of the Rh antigen (factor) in erythrocytes . Rh-negative persons who receive Rh-positive ... transfusions produce antibodies to Rh factor, which attack red blood cells with the factor if they are ever received again, causing ... antibodies also ...
Read more
|
|
Rh
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
Rh • abbr. Rhesus (factor). • symb. the chemical element rhodium.
Read more
|
|
rhesus factor
World Encyclopedia
rhesus factor (Rh factor) Any of a group of antigens found ... erythrocytes (red blood cells). Rh-negative (Rh−) blood lacks the rhesus factor. Rh factor is present in c .85% of humans (Rh+). Rh incompatibility (an Rh ...
Read more
|
|
Rhesus factor
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
Rhe·sus fac·tor / ˈrēsəs / (abbr.: Rh fac·tor ) • n. [in sing. ] an antigen occurring on the red blood cells of many humans (around 85 percent) and some ...
Read more
|