Warm-up What are the functions of the lymphatic system? What color should healthy lymph be? Which organ is the “Hogwarts” of T-cells where they mature and learn their “magic”? What happens to its size as you age? Which organ filters old RBCs, makes immune cells , and is posterior and lateral to stomach? Which structure makes WBCs, RBCs, and platelets? If someone punches you in the right ear, which main duct does they excess fluid from dead cells end up in before it returns to the blood?
Non-specific Immunity- “1st Line” of Defense Nonspecific immunity- mechanisms of the body that respond to many different pathogens or invaders
Nonspecific Immunity Prevent or destroy pathogens Attacks anything that is considered “not self”- viruses, bacteria, prions Attacks pathogen immediately General defense
Mechanisms Involved 1. Species Resistance- genetic characteristics which prevent an organism from contracting a disease Ex. Dogs cannot contract mumps 2. Mechanical Barriers- “castle wall” of our body of densely packed cells and other materials which protect from invasion, sloughed off (10B skin cells/day=250 g./year) Ex. Skin, mucous membranes If either is broken, pathogens can enter.
“First Line” of Defense Mechanical barrier on all surfaces of body exposed to external world What are they? Skin Mucous membranes—nasal, respiratory Lining of mouth Lining of gut Lining of vagina/urethra Surface of eye
Barrier Membranes Skin
Mechanisms Involved 3. Chemical Barriers- chemicals that interfere with the production of a pathogen Ex. Mucus- sticky, traps pathogen Enzymes- proteins that destroy pathogen HCl- stomach acid- lowers pH to kill pathogen 4. Resident microbes-have commensal or mutualistic bacteria and fungi that are normally present and out-compete potential pathogens
WU:Lymphatic/1st Line of Defense Review List 2 of the 4 mechanisms that make up the 1st line of defense. Name the 2 mechanical barriers. What organ is responsible for filtering lymph? _______________ immunity makes up the 1st line of defense. The thoracic duct drains what portion of the body? Saliva and enzymes are part of the _____________ barriers of the 1st line of defense.
Second Line of Defense Fever Inflammation Phagocytosis NONSpecific- All work tightly with specific immunity
Fever Pluses Inhibit microbial growth Enhance immune cell performance Trigger not completely understood Muscular contraction and constriction of skin blood vessels cause core temperature to rise Pluses Inhibit microbial growth Enhance immune cell performance Speed tissue repair Minuses Malaise Body aches chills “Breaking” fever or “crisis of fever”: body begins to cool by sweating, “color returns” as blood vessels in skin open Indicates infection is overcome
Inflammation Response to tissue damage from any source (burn, cut, pathogen, other??) 4 Cardinal Signs- redness- inc. blood volume swelling- inc. capillary permeability Phagocytes migrate out of capillaries Heat- inc. blood from deep within body Pain- stimulates pain receptors
Phagocytosis Phagocytes move through blood and lymph and into connective tissues and engulf and destroy cells or pathogens Ex. Neutrophils and monocytes
Langerhans cells in skin Phagocytes in blood Microglial cells in CNS
Great review of “Body Defenses” or Non-specific Immunity http://fajerpc.magnet.fsu.edu/Education/2010/2010_INDEX.HTM
2nd line of Defense Name the 4 parts of the 2nd line of defense. Is the 2nd line Nonspecific or specific? _____ increases phagocytic cells _____ is the tissue response to injury. 4 signs of inflammation? Increase in ______ volume causes redness, swelling, and heat. Stimulation of _____ receptors cause pain. The process of WBCs to engulf and destroy pathogens is_______. A WBC responsible for phagocytosis is a _________.