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Lymphatic System and Immunity
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Maintaining physical health requires continuous combat
against harmful agents
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Pathogens
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Disease
producing microbes
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Immunity or resistance
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Ability
to ward off damage or disease
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Susceptinilty
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Lack of resistance
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Two general types of immunity
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Innate (nonspecific) immunity
Adaptive (specific) immunity
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Innate
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(nonspecific) immunity: defenses that are present from birth
and are always available to protect us against disease.
Does not involve specific recognition of a microbe
Innate immunity does not have a memory component.
Components are the first line of defense (skin and mucous
membranes) and the second line of defense (natural killer cells and phagocytes,
inflammation, fever, and antimicrobial substances).
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Adaptive
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(specific) immunity: defenses that involve specific
recognition of a microbe.
Is based on a
specific response to a specific microbe; it adapts or adjusts to handle a
single type of invader.
Adaptive immunity is slower to respond but it does have a
memory component.
Adaptive immunity involves lymphocytes called T lymphocytes
(T
cells) and B lymphocytes (B cells).
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Lymphatic system has three primary function
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Drains excess intersitial fluid and plasma proteinsTransports dietary liipids and vitamins from GI tract to bloodCarries out immune responses
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The lymphatic system consists of four elements
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Lymph
Lymphatic vessels
Structures and organs containing lymphocytes
Red bone marrow
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Lymphatic Vessels and Circulation
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Lymphatic capillaries
Lymphatic vessels
Lymph nodes
Lymph trunks and ducts
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Tissues
that lack lymphatic capillaries include
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avascular tissues (such as cartilage, the epidermis, and the
cornea of the eye), the central nervous system, portions of the spleen, and red
bone marrow
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Lacteals carry
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Dietary
lipids into lymphatic vessels and ultimately into the blood
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Chyle
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The
presence of these lipids causes the lymph draining from the small intestine to
appear creamy white; such lymph
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Lymphatic Capillaries
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Lymphatic capillaries are slightly larger in diameter than
blood capillaries
A unique structure that permits interstitial fluid to flow
into, but not out.
The ends of endothelial cells that make up the wall of a
lymphatic capillary overlap.
When pressure is greater in the interstitial fluid than in
lymph, the cells separate slightly, and interstitial fluid enters the lymphatic
capillary.
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Attached
to the lymphatic capillaries are
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Anchoring
filaments, with elastic fibers
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