Chapter 12: Lymphatic System/Immunity
1. Lymphatic system
a. Two semi-independent parts
i. Lymphatic vessels
ii. Lymphold tissue and organs
b. Lymphatic system functions
i. Transports escaped fluids back to the blood
ii. Plays essential roles in immunity
2. Lymphatic characteristics
a. Lymph- excess tissue fluid carried by lymphatic vessels
b. Properties of lymphatic vessels
i. One way system toward the heart
ii. No pump
iii. Lymph moves toward the heart
iv. Milking action of skeletal muscle
v. Rhythmic contractions of smooth muscle in vessel walls
3. Lymphatic vessels
a. Lymphatic capillaries
i. Walls overlap to form flap-like minivalves
ii. Fluid leaks into lymph capillaries
iii. Capillaries: anchored to connective tissue by filaments
iv. Higher pressure on the inside closes minivalves
v. Fluid forced along the vessel
b. Lymphatic collecting vessels (like veins)
i. Collect lymph from lymph capillaries
ii. Carry lymph to and away from lymph nodes
iii. Return fluid to circulatory veins near the heart
1. Right lymphatic duct
2. Thoracic duct
4. Lymph: contains
a. Bacteria
b. Viruses
c. Cancer cells
d. Cell debris
5. Lymph nodes
a. Filter lymph before it is returned to the blood
b. Defense cells within lymph nodes:
c. Macrophages- engulf and destroy foreign substances
d. Lymphocytes- provide immune responses to antigens
6. Other lymphoid organs
a. Spleen
b. Thymus- most active through early childhood
c. Tonsils
d. Peyer’s patches- in intestinal walls
7. Lines of defense
a. First line = skin and mucous membrane
i. Physical barrier to foreign materials
ii. Also provide protective secretions:
1. pH of skin is acidic to inhibit bacterial growth
2. sebum (oil) is toxic to bacteria
3. vaginal secretions are very acidic
b. Second line =
i. Phagocytes- cells that eat mostly bacteria
ii. Natural killer cells- contain toxic chemicals
iii. Inflammatory response (next slide)
iv. Fever- “cooks” invaders
1. Redness
2. Heat
3. Swelling
4. Pain
5. Results in a chain of events leading to protection and healing
c. Third line =
i. Immune response = immune system’s response to a threat
ii. Immunology = study of immunity
iii. Antibodies = proteins that protect from pathogens, attack antigen molecules
iv. Three aspects
1. Antigen specific- recognizes and acts against particular and foreign substances
2. Systemic- not restricted to the initial infection
3. Memory- recognizes and mounts a stronger attack on previously encountered pathogens
v. Types
1. Humoral immunity = antibody-mediated immunity
a. Provided by antibodies present in body fluids
2. Cellular immunity = cell-mediated immunity
a. Targets virus-infected cells, cancer cells, and cells of foreign grafts
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