PP Chapter 20-Lymphatic System
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Transcript PP Chapter 20-Lymphatic System
The Lymphatic
Biology 2122
Chapter 20
Functions of the Lymphatic System
1. Drain Excess ‘interstitial’ fluid
◦ 2-3 L of fluid lost from the blood stream/day
2. Transport dietary lipids
◦ From GI tract to the blood (lipids and lipid-soluble vitamins)
3. Immune Response
◦ A. Cell-mediated response
T-cell response (cytotoxic cells destroy antigens)
◦ B. Humoral – response
Antibody-mediated (B-Cells)
Basic Structure
1. Lymph Fluid
◦ Interstitial fluid ------ lymph
capillaries
2. Lymph Vessels
◦ Capillaries, ducts, etc.
3. Lymph Tissue and Organs
◦ Specialized reticular tissue
◦ Large numbers of lymphocytes
◦ Organs: Thymus gland;
Tonsils; Spleen
Lost lymph fluid - returned to the
heart.
1. Capillaries
◦ Endothelial Cells and mini-valves
Supported by collagen
One way pressure from the capillaries
move lymph towards the capillaries
◦ Very permeable
2. Capillaries form vessels
◦ Skin follow veins; viscera follow path of
arteries
◦ Lymph flows into the nodes
◦ No lymph vessels (cartilage, epidermis,
cornea- all avacular); CNS
and red bone marrow
Tissues to the
Heart
Chyle and Lacteals
Lipids absorption take place in the small intestine
Lacteals
◦ Small capillaries in the absorptive cells
◦ Lipids transported from lacteals into the blood
Specialized lipid absorption
Chyle
◦ In small intestine lymph is white or creamy due to lipid presence
(lymph is normally clear)
Flow and Structure
Capillaries -----
Collecting vessels ----
Nodes --- Trunks ------
Lymph ducts (thoracic
and right lymphatic) ---- Internal jugular and
Subclavian vein ----
Heart
On the way to the heart
1. Trunks – lumbar, intestinal, bronchomediastinal,
subclavian, jugular
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
A. lumbar
B. intestinal
C. bronchomediastinal
D. subclavian
E. Jugular
2. Thoracic (left lymphatic) duct
◦
Cisterna chyli
◦ Main duct for return of lymph to blood from left side of body
◦ Drains into the L.internal jugular and L.subclavian vein
On the way to the heart
3. Right lymphatic duct
– Receives lymph from
right side of the body
– Drains blood into
venous blood at
junction of R. internal
jugular and R.
subclavian veins
Flow of Lymph against Gravity
Same problems as encountered by venous return
Pumps
◦ 1. Skeletal system pump
◦ 2. Respiratory pump
Organs and
Tissues
Organs and Tissues
1. Primary Organs – stem cell division produces mature
cells – immunocompetent
◦ Red bone marrow
B – cells; pre-T cells
◦ Thymus
Pre-T cells migrate to thymus to become immunocompetent
2. Secondary Organs
◦ Site of immune system response
◦ Nodes, spleen, nodules
Bi-lobed- surrounded by CT
and separated by capsule
Trabeculae -separates tissue
into lobes
Lobe
◦ Cortex -(T-cells and Dendritic
cells, Epithelial cells and
Macrophages)
◦ Medulla – mature T-cells,
dendritic cells and macrophoges
◦ Thymic (Hassal’s corpusles)
Thymus
Lymphatic Nodules
Lymph Nodes
◦ B-cells (primary lymphatic nodule)
◦ Plasma and memory B cells in outer
cortex (secondary lymphatic nodule)
B-cell in primary nodule recognizes
antigen and transforms into a
secondary nodule
◦ Germinal center
◦ B-cells, follicular dendritic cells,
macrophages
Antigen presented by APC (B-cell;
dendritic , etc.) B- cells develop into
plasma and memory cells
Inner cortex and medulla
Covered by Dense CT capsule
Covered by Dense CT capsule
Visceral peritoneum – serous membrane
Stroma
◦ Trabeculae, reticular fibers and fibroblasts
Parenchyma
◦ 1. White pulp – lymphocytes and macrophages around central
arteries (splenic artery branches)
◦ 2. Red pulp – venous sinuses, cords of splenic tissue or splenic cords
(RBCs, macrophages, lymphocytes, plasma cells, granulocytes
Spleen
Nodules
No capsule
Found in mucous membranes (near lamina propria) in GI
tract, urinary, reproductive, respiratory airways
◦ “Mucosa-associated lymphatic tissue (MALT)
Can be small or larger tissue
◦ Tonsils (5)-Pharyngeal area
Pharyngeal (adenoid- posterior nasopharynx)
Palatine (2)-posterior region of oral cavity (tonsillectomy)
Lingual (2)-base of tongue