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Published byDana Perkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Lymphatic & Immune Systems
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Lymphatic pathways & capillaries
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Lymphatic trunks and ducts Asymmetrical!
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Edema 24 liters of lymph are pushed from capillaries every day to bathe the cells – if it isn’t all collected – it’s edema!! Post-mastectomy lymphedema ------>
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What is lymph? It is plasma It is interstitial fluid It is fluid picked up by lymph capillaries It depends where it is!!
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What does lymph do? Collects fluid and proteins that squeeze out through the capillaries Absorbs dietary fats Transports bacteria and viruses to lymph nodes
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Keep it moving No heart Skeletal muscle movement Valves prevent backflow Trunks contract a little Inhaling creates pressure that moves lymph from abdominal to thoracic cavity
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Lymph nodes Bean shaped 2.5 cm long Medulla has T cells and macrophages One exit slows traffic
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Lymphoid organs Do NOT filter lymph, but play a role – Tonsils (MALT) – Peyer’s patches (MALT) – Thymus gland – Spleen MALT = mucosa-associated lymphatic tissue
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Spleen & Thymus Spleen – filters blood – White pulp contains lymphocytes – Red pulp filters out broken down RBC’s Thymus – contains lymphocytes that mature in T lymphocytes
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2 Lines of Defense Innate – Species resistance – Mechanical barriers – Chemical barriers Tears Stomach acid Salt Antimicrobials – Fever – Natural Killer Cells – Inflammation – Phagocytosis Adaptive – Antingens (sprinkles) – Antigen-presenting cells – T cells – Cytotoxic T cells ( fight cancer ) – Memory T cells – Helper T cells ( stimulate B cells ) – B cells Immunoglobins = antibodies
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What’s the diff? T cells Directly attack cells w/ toxins or growth inhibitor Mature in the thymus gland Activated by antigen-presenting cells Helper T cells are targeted by HIV Cytotoxic T cells target tumors and virus infected cells Memory T cells confer immunity Activate B cells B cells Differentiate into Plasma cells that produce antibodies Activated by specific antigens or helper T cells Mature in the bone marrow Part of the humoral response
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What’s the same? Both respond to specific antigens We have millions of varieties of each
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What do antibodies do? Attack – Disable them so that macrophages will get them Activate enzymes that attack antigens – Complement proteins Change the environment to stop the antigens – inflammation
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Tissue Rejection Human Leukocyte Antigens (HLA’s) determine our tissue type Inherited from parents Three groups: HLA-A,HLA-B and HLA-DR. many different specific HLA proteins within each of these three groups. ¼ chance that you and a sibling are identical http://www.stanford.edu/dept/HPS/transplan t/html/hla.html
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Allergic (hypersensitivity) Reaction Type I (anaphylactic) – Triggered by allergens – Occurs within minutes – Overproduction of IgE antibodies – Severe inflammation Ex: peanut allergy Type IV ( delayed-reaction ) – Repeated exposures to allergins – Activates T cells – T cells cause inflammation Ex: poison oak
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Autoimmunity Cytotoxic T cells attack tissues of your own body Mistaken identity Why? – Improperly educated T cells? – Virus with “self markers” on it? Examples: rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis
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