Red blood cells (RBCs), also known as erythrocytes, are body’s primary vehicle for oxygen delivery.
Red blood cells are microscopic, disc-shaped cells found in blood of vertebrates. They are unique human cells because, in mature state, It lack nucleus and organelles. The empty space is packed with hemoglobin, a complex protein that binds to oxygen.
Structure
The structure of an RBC is optimized for efficiency and flexibility.
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Biconcave Shape: This biconcave geometry increases surface-area-to-volume ratio, allowing for faster gas exchange.
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Flexibility: Because of no rigid nucleus, RBCs are soft. This allows them to deform and squeeze through capillaries that are narrower than cell itself.
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Hemoglobin: Each RBC contain 270 million hemoglobin molecules. Hemoglobin contains iron, which give blood red color when oxygenated.
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Lack of Mitochondria: RBCs do not use oxygen they transport. Instead, produce energy through anaerobic metabolism, ensure every bit of oxygen reaches its destination.
Functions
Primary role of RBC is gas transport.
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Oxygen Transport: Picking up oxygen in lungs and releasing it into body’s tissues.
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Carbon Dioxide Removal: Carrying CO2 (a waste product) from tissues back to lungs to be exhaled.
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pH Buffering: Helping maintain acid-base balance of blood through action of enzyme carbonic anhydrase.
Life Cycle
RBC last approximately 120 days.
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Erythropoiesis (Production): It occur in red bone marrow. Triggered by hormone erythropoietin (released by kidneys), stem cells transform into reticulocytes (young RBCs) and eventually mature erythrocytes.
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Circulation: Cell spends about four months traveling through the heart, arteries, and veins, completing thousands of circuits.
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Senescence (Aging): As cell ages, its membrane becomes fragile and less flexible.
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Destruction: Old cells are trapped and broken down byspleen and liver. Iron is save for new cells, while the rest of hemoglobin is converted into bilirubin (secreted in bile).
Normal Range
RBC counts are measured via a Complete Blood Count (CBC). Normal ranges fall into these categories:
| Group | Normal Range (Cells per microliter) |
| Adult Men | 4.7 to 6.1 million |
| Adult Women | 4.2 to 5.4 million |
| Children | 4.0 to 5.5 million |