Lymphatic System Flashcards

1
Q

Lymphatic system

A

Vast network of lymphatic vessels
Connected with lymph nodes (masses of lymphatic tissue)
Secondary circulatory system
Collects surplus tissue fluid (lymph)
Includes spleen, bone marrow, thymus, nodes, and vessels

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2
Q

Lymphatic system functions

A
Drainage of tissue fluid 
Collection of lymph from tissue spaces
Transport of lymph to venous system 
Absorption and transport of fat 
Defence mechanism for body to transport antibodies and lymphocytes to fight pathogens
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3
Q

Lymph enters

A

Right lymphatic duct (right upper body)
Thoracic duct (rest of body)
Lymph re-enters venous circulatory system

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4
Q

Lymphatic vessels in brain

A

Located in dura mater
Extends the length of superior sagittal and transverse sinuses
Fluid to venous system

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5
Q

Lymphoid organs

A

Lymph node
Thymus
Spleen

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6
Q

Lymph nodes

A
Tonsils
Dense CT throughout body 
Functions to filter lymph before reaching venous circulation 
Usually react first to pathogens 
Strategically positioned 
Fixed macrophages
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7
Q

Thymus

A

Posterior to sternum
Important role in growth and development of immune system
Continues to grow until puberty
Gradually replaced by fat after puberty
Continues to produce T-lymphocytes in adulthood

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8
Q

Spleen

A

Largest of lymphatic organs
Located in left upper quadrant
Protected by ribs 9-11
Large splenic artery due to large blood volume

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9
Q

Spleen functions

A

Blood is monitored by T-cells for any pathogens

Macrophages swallow and digest debris in blood

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10
Q

Immune responses

A
Innate = don’t need previous exposure to pathogen in order to attack it 
Acquired = learn to recognize a pathogen; mount a larger response on second exposure
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11
Q

Lymphocytes

A
3 types 
T-cells (thymus dependant)
B-cells (bone marrow)
NK cells (natural killer) 
80% are T-cells (cytotoxic, helper, suppressor)
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12
Q

Defence mechanisms

A
Non-specific = does not distinguish between pathogens, fever/skin/phagocytes/inflammation, NK cells/mast cells/basophils/neutrophils/eosinophils/macrophages
Specific = depends on activity of lymphocytes (T-cells manufactured for a specific bacteria)
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13
Q

Gastrointestinal (GI) tract

A

Represents 70% of entire immune system
Gut contains trillions of microorganisms
Development of immune system dependant upon exposure to microorganisms

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14
Q

Lymph in GI tract

A

Small intestine = 2.5cm in diameter, 3m long, 20-40 villi/sq mm
Gut-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT)
Mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN’s)

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15
Q

Non-specific defences in gut

A

Epithelial lining

Gut microbiota

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16
Q

Epithelial lining

A

First line of defence against pathogens
Depends on tight junction proteins (TJP’s) and intact mucosal layers
If compromised it may lead to disease or infection

17
Q

Gut microbiota

A
Energy harvest 
Produce neurotransmitters 
Break down fibres 
Bacterial interference (opportunistic/“bad” bacteria can’t colonize) 
Defend against pathogens 
Repairs and maintains epithelial lining 
Maintains health of TJP’s
18
Q

Factors influencing microbiome

A
Diet (probiotics/prebiotics)
Stress
Sickness
Infection 
Mode of delivery (C-section/vaginal)
Antibiotic use in pregnancy or early life
19
Q

Germ free animals

A

Defects in their spleen and MLN’s
Imbalance of T-cells
Low immune, cellular, humoral activity
Altered metabolism, behaviour, brain development

20
Q

Germ free studies

A

Study published in 2015 found that GF mice had disrupted neuroimmune process
Administering short-chain fatty acids (SCFA’s) reversed effects

21
Q

Fecal microbiota transfer (FMT)

A

In humans used for C. difficile infections
Bacterial interference (non specific immunity)
Reduces risk of antibiotic resistance
85-90% effective in those who don’t respond to abx
Potential therapeutic benefit for = IBS or IBD, ulcerative colitis, C. difficile infection, and other GI disorders

22
Q

Process for FMT

A

50-300g of feces collected from donor
Feces are dissolved in 50-100ml of normal saline
Fecal materials are filtered through a metal strainer
Fecal slurry is administered through colonoscopy

23
Q

Hippocrates

A

Father of modern medicine
“All diseases begin in the gut”
“Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food”