Transcript Document

Chapter 15
The Lymphatic System
and Immunity
Function of the Lymphatic
System
Protect body from pathological
bacteria, foreign tissue cells, and
cancerous cells
Lymph
• Fluid in the tissue spaces that carries
protein molecules and other substances
back to the blood
• Created from fluids that do not get back
into capillaries during cardiovascular
circulation
Lymphatic Capillaries
– Tiny closed-ended tubes
– Microscopic in size
– One cell layer of simple squamous epithelium
– Called lacteals in the intestinal wall (for fat
transportation)
Lymphatic Vessels
• Permit only one-way movement of lymph
• Gradually get larger as they move toward
the heart
Lymph Nodes
– Located in clusters along the pathway of
lymphatic vessels
– Filter lymph
– Lymph fluid flows in from several points, out
through one vessel
– Lymph flows through many nodes along the
pathway and is filtered in each node
Structure of Lymph nodes
Lymphatic Ducts
– Right lymphatic duct
• Drains lymph from the right upper extremity and
right side of head, neck, and upper torso
• Empties cleansed lymph into right subclavian vein
– Thoracic duct
• Largest lymphatic vessel
• Drains lymph from about three fourths of the body
– Right lower quadrant, Left upper and lower quadrants
• Empties cleansed lymph into left subclavian vein
Process
1. Lymph absorbed from tissues
2. Lymph capillaries carry fluid to lymph
vessels
3. Fluid is cleansed in lymph nodes as it
flows through vessels
4. Vessels deliver fluids to ducts
5. Ducts empty fluids into subclavian veins
MORE LYMPH STRUCTURES
Thymus
– Located in mediastinum
– Secretes hormone called thymosin
• Stimulates production of T-lymphocytes or T cells
– Large at birth
• Shrinks over lifetime as less Tcell production is
needed
Tonsils
Spleen
– Largest lymphoid organ in body
– In upper left quadrant of abdomen
– Functions include phagocytosis of bacteria
and old RBCs; acts as a blood reservoir
IMMUNITY
Types of Immunity
• Nonspecific immunity
– General things the body does to protect itself
from pathogens
– Not targeted at a specific pathogen
– i.e.
membranes that protect organs
eyes tearing to wash substances out
inflammation
The Immune System
• Specific immunity—
– Ability of body to recognize and remember
harmful substances or bacteria
– Allows body to respond to a pathogen before
we become ill from it
Terms related to immunity
• Natural immunity—
• Active—active disease produces immunity
• Passive—immunity passes from mother to fetus
through placenta or from mother to child through
mother’s milk
• Artificial immunity
• Active—vaccination results in immunity
• Passive—protective material developed in another
individual’s immune system and given to
previously nonimmune individual
Immune System Molecules
• Antibodies
– Protein compounds
– Attach to specific antigens
• humoral or antibody-mediated immunity
– Antigen-antibody complexes may:
• Neutralize toxins
• Clump or agglutinate enemy cells
• Promote phagocytosis
Lymphcytes
• Two types
– B cells
• Produce antibodies
• Related to humoral (antibody mediated) immunity
– T cells
• Related to cell mediated immunity
• Play a role in killing individual cells of the pathogen
Hypersensitivity
• Allergy—
– hypersensitivity to harmless environmental
antigens (allergens)
• Autoimmunity—
– inappropriate, excessive response to tissues
within the body
• Body attacks its own tissues
• Results in “autoimmune disorders”
Hypersensitivity (cont)
• Isoimmunity—
– excessive reaction to antigens from another
human
• May occur between mother and fetus during
pregnancy
• Common with tissue transplants