lymphatic system Flashcards
- What are the functions of the lymphatic system?
Maintain fluid balance - collects excess interstitial fluid and returns it to the systemic circulation (helps maintain blood volume too)
Defense against disease - lymph contains pathogens and is filtered in the lymph nodes
Transportation - lacteals (specialized lymphatic capillaries) collect absorbed dietary fats in intestines which are returned into the blood
- Describe the relationship between lymph fluid, interstitial fluid, and plasma.
Distinguish between the composition of the three fluids.
Lymph Fluid- interstitial fluid once it enters the blood
Interstitial Fluid - fluid that surrounds tissue
Plasma - non-living component of blood
All composed of the same thing - plasma proteins and water
- Describe the structure of lymphatic capillaries. Compare and contrast the structure of
lymphatic and blood capillaries.
Lymphatic capillaries are highly permeable; they consist of epithelial cells that are staggered on top of one another to create flaplike minivalves. Collagen fibers anchor the cells to surrounding structures.
Lymphatic capillaries are more permeable than blood capillaries. The lymphatic capillaries are also able to take in the larger particles that the blood capillaries are not able to. The lymphatic capillaries mainly transport pathogens, cell debris, and cancer cells, and blood capillaries mainly transport oxygen and nutrients; however, lymphatic capillaries also transport dietary nutrients (dietary fats via lacteals).
- Describe the process of lymph formation (i.e., how/why fluid enters the lymphatic
capillaries) .
Blood constantly exchanges products with the interstitial fluid; at the capillary bed, fluid is pushed out of the blood (by hydrostatic and osmotic pressures) and into the interstitial fluid (at the arterial end) with most returning on the venous end. The remaining fluid becomes a part of the interstitial fluid. The fluid enters lymphatic vessels (becoming lymph) with the ultimate goal of re-entering the blood.
- How does the lymphatic system contribute to fluid balance in the body?
The interstitial fluid that is not returned back to the blood at the venous end of the capillary bed is eventually returned to the blood stream (through the lymphatic system). This helps maintain blood volume in the cardiovascular system.
- Describe the structure of the lymphatic vessels. To which vessels of the systemic
circulation are they most similar?
Lymphatic vessels start at the lymphatic capillaries and get progressively bigger and thicker. They unite to form the five lymphatic trunks (4 are bilateral) which then drain into two ducts. These vessels are most similar to the venous system (lymph is moved via the same mechanisms that stimulate venous blood return [i.e. muscle pump, pulmonary pressure changes, and valves])
- How is lymph moved through the lymphatic vessels?
lymph is moved via the same mechanisms that stimulate venous blood return (i.e. muscle pump, pulmonary pressure changes, and valves)
- Name the two large, lymphatic ducts which conduct lymph into the venous circulation.
Identify the regions of the body drained by each of these large ducts.
Right Lymphatic Duct - drains the right upper limb, right side of the head, the thorax
Thoracic Duct - drains the rest of the body
- Identify the ways unencapsulated lymphoid tissue is found in the body. List an example
of each type.
Diffuse lymphoid tissue - (loose arrangement of lymphoid cells and some reticular fibers) found in every organ (example: larger collection found in the lamina propria of the mucous membrane of the the lining of the digestive tract)
Lymphoid follicles - (solid spherical bodies of packed lymphoid cells & reticular fibers) (example: Peyer’s patches and in the appendix and in the lymph nodes)
- Identify whether the following are primary or secondary lymphoid organs: bone
marrow, lymph nodes, the thymus, the spleen.
Primary Lymphoid Organs - (where the lymphocytes mature) bone marrow; thymus
Secondary Lymphoid Organics - (where mature lymphocytes first encounter antigens) lymph nodes; spleen
- Where along the lymphatic pathway would the greatest number of lymph nodes be expected?
The greatest number of lymph nodes occur near the body surface where the lymphatic vessel converge to form trunks (in the inguinal, axillary, and cervical regions)
- Describe the structure of a lymph node. What cells of the immune system are located
in each region of a lymph node?
Consists of a cortex and a medulla
Cortex
- Germinal centers heavy with dividing B cells found superficially
- T cells housed in the deep areas of the cortex
- Dendritic cells found throughout the cortex and help prepare both B and T cells to become effective defensive cells
- Macrophages found in the subcapsular sinus (on the crisscrossed reticular fibers within) to phagocytize foreign material
Medulla
- Contains both lymphocytes (B cells and T cells) on medullary cords (thin inward extensions from cortical lymphoid tissue
- Macrophages found in the medullary sinus
- Lymph flows slowly through lymph nodes, ensuring adequate time for filtering and
cleansing by cells of the immune system. Describe the lymph pathway through a lymph
node. What structural feature(s) help(s) insure that lymph flows slowly through lymph
nodes?
Multiple afferent lymph vessels (convex side) → subcapsular sinus → medullary sinus → fewer efferent lymphatic vessels (concave side at the hilum)
More afferent lymph vessels than efferent lymph vessels slows the movement of lymph through lymph nodes –> Allows for effective activation of lymphocytes
- What is the function of lymph nodes?
Cleanses the lymph through macrophages found in the lymph sinuses
Site of immune system activation (lymphocytes encounter antigens here)
- Identify the three main types of lymphoid cells and describe the general function of
each.
Lymphocytes
- B cells - produce plasma cells (which produce antibodies)
- T cells - manage immune response (and target and kill foreign cells) - think helper T cells and cytotoxic t cells
Macrophages
- Phagocytize foreign material; help activate T cells
- They present the fragments - antigen presenting cells
Dendritic cells
- Capture antigens and bring them to lymph nodes (unless they’re already in the lymph nodes lol)
- Antigen presenting cells
Reticular cells
- Create the reticular fibers that are part of the lymphoid tissue - network that supports the other cell types in lymphoid organs and tissues