The Lymphatic System and Spleen Flashcards
What is the role of the Lymphatic system
The lymphatic system is the drainage system of the body
What is the role of the lymph?
(watery fluid collected from tissues)
This fluid contains antibodies and lymphocytes. It also contains bacteria that will get filtered out by the lymphatic system. The lymph is transported by the nodes and vessels.
What is the role of the lymphocytes?
Lymphocytes are a type of white blood cell. There are 2 types, B cells and T cells. B cells produce the antibodies which are important for killing pathogens. T cells identify infected cells and get rid of them
What is the role of the Lymphatic vessels?
Lymphatic vessels are similar to blood vessels. They carry the lymph around the body. They are very thin.
Have numerous cup-shaped valves (like veins) to ensure that lymph flows towards the thorax.
Eventually, form 2 large ducts; The thoracic duct and the right lymphatic duct, which empty lymph into the subclavian veins.
What is the role of the Lymph nodes?
Lymph nodes are important because they filter out the harmful substances. They contain white blood cells to fight pathogens in the lymph fluid. They are small lumps of tissue.
What is the role of tonsils?
They are located in the throat and palate and they stop pathogens from entering the body. They contain white blood cells. 3 groups Pharyngeal (adenoids) Palatine Lingual
What is the role of the spleen?
It filters the blood and removes the damaged red blood cells and stores the iron.
It also stores blood and will release the blood into the circulatory system in an emergency such as extreme blood loss (erythropoiesis).
Largest of the lymph organs. Lies in left hypochondriac region. Served by \+ Splenic Artery – branch of Coeliac artery \+ Splenic Vein – branch of portal vein \+ Lymph vessels \+ Nerves
What is the role of Thymus Gland?
Produces progenitor cells which will mature into T-cells. The T-cells will destroy infected cells or cancerous cells.
2 lobes joined by areolar tissue.
Enclosed by a fibrous capsule, that divides it into lobes.
What is the Thoracic Duct?
Begins at cisterna chyli – dilated lymph channel in front of L1 and L2.
40 cm long
Opens into the Left subclavian vein at root of neck.
Drains both legs, pelvis, abdomen, left half of thorax, head, neck and left arm.
What does the Right Lymphatic Duct do?
1 cm long
Lies in root of neck and drains into Right subclavian vein
Drains right half of thorax, head, neck and right arm.
How does the lymph move?
The lymph doesn’t have a pump so it has many valves to prevent backflow and muscular walls contract to help push lymph against gravity. Also, pressure from surrounding tissue such as muscle contraction is needed to help push lymph along.
Lymphatic organs and tissues?
Lymph nodes
Tonsils
Spleen
Thymus
Structure and location of lymph nodes?
Bean shaped or oval.
Pin head -almond in size.
Often in groups of either deep or superficial.
Superficial ones – neck, arm pit, groin.
Lymph pass through 8-10 nodes before draining back into the venous circulation.
Outer capsule of fibrous tissue.
Reticular cells which make a fibrous structure within the node.
Mucosa – Associated Lymphoid Tissue (MALT)
Have no capsule
Do not filter lymph
Not exposed to diseases spread by lymph
Peyer’s Patches – small intestine
Structure of the spleen?
Oval Peritoneum covers the anterior surface Covered with fibro-elastic capsule and dips into the organ forming trabeculae. Splenic pulp lies in between. Red pulp – filled with blood White pulp – filled with lymph