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Name ______________________________________ Assignment: Disease Fighters Period ____ Note: You will need a Science & Life Issues book to complete this assignment Purpose: Students will investigate how the human immune system helps fight invading organisms. Students view microscope slides of normal human blood and perform simulated tests for blood-type compatibility. The fast that immune reactions are not always beneficial is addressed. 1. Read pages 77-78. The procedure for this assignment is on pages 79-81. Starting: Half of the class will do Part 1 while the other does Part 2. The two groups switch half way though class. PART 1: Blood Type and Immune Response Do steps 1-6; Use the table below to record your data. Comment on the table if the solution remains clear or clumps when mixed. Data Table: Blood Compatibility Patient Donor type A Sasha (type A) Donor type B Donor type O Fong (type B) Jordan (type AB) Questions: 1. Each patient required one pint of blood. The hospital received one pint each of type A, B, and O blood. Explain whether the hospital had enough of the right type of blood for each patient (who received which donated blood type). 2. What prevents your body from accepting transfusions of certain blood types? Compatibility of Human Blood Types Recipients Donors O A B AB O Accepts Accepts Accepts Accepts A clumps Accepts clumps Accepts B AB clumps clumps Accepts Accepts clumps clumps clumps Accepts When the blood type of the donor is not compatible with that of the recipient (patient), the antibodies present in the recipient’s blood causes the transfused red blood cells to clump. These clumps can create blockages in blood vessels and cause death. Because of differences in what antibodies are present, type O individuals are universal donors but type AB individuals are universal recipients. 3. Why is type O considered the universal donor? 4. What blood type can the recipient have where he can accept any blood type from a donor? Blood types also have an additional consideration called Rh factor. Each blood type can have or not have this factor. If a blood type does not have the Rh factor, the blood type is labeled – (O-, B-, AB-, B-). If the blood type has an Rh factor, the blood is labeled + (O+, B+, AB+). The following is a table with Rh factors taken into consideration: Recipients Donors OO+ AA+ BB+ ABAB+ OAccepts Accepts Accepts Accepts Accepts Accepts Accepts Accepts O+ clumps Accepts clumps Accepts clumps Accepts clumps Accepts Aclumps clumps Accepts Accepts clumps clumps Accepts Accepts A+ clumps clumps clumps Accepts clumps clumps clumps Accepts Bclumps clumps clumps clumps Accepts Accepts Accepts Accepts B+ clumps clumps clumps clumps clumps Accepts clumps Accepts ABclumps clumps clumps clumps clumps clumps Accepts Accepts AB+ clumps clumps clumps clumps clumps clumps clumps Accepts 5. What Blood type, with Rh factor, is now the universal donor? Explain. 6. What blood types can a recipient with a blood type of A- accept? ___________________ 7. What blood types can a recipient with a blood type of A+ accept? ___________________ Part 2: Blood Cells 1. Follow the directions in the book on page 80-81 for part 2. Name __________________________________ Magnification: 400 2. Describe the 2 different types of cells you observed on the slide (color, shape, possibility of a nucleus) Cell type A: Cell type B: 3. Which cell type was more common? Which cell type was smaller/bigger? 4. In what ways does your body prevent you from catching an infectious disease? (list at least 2)