100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Class notes

Anatomy and Physiology II, Unit 3 Lecture Objectives

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
24
Uploaded on
11-02-2026
Written in
2023/2024

Summary of all class notes covered in Unit 3 of Anatomy and Physiology II from a former PAL leader,

Content preview

Lymphatic System
Identify the lymphatic vessels and discuss how lymph is transported through these structures
●​ lymphatic vessels carry lymph fluid in a one-way flow pattern toward the heart
●​ Lymphatic capillaries
○​ Lymph starts here (beginning of lymphatic pathway)
○​ Formed by loosely overlapping simple squamous epithelial cells which overlay
like shingles on a roof
○​ Cells are anchored by collagen filaments at one end
○​ Highly permeable → ET cells pivot open and close to allow fluids and larger
proteins through
○​ High pressure outside the capillary opens the flaps and allows fluid to enter, high
pressure inside the capillaries pushes flaps closed and keeps fluid in
○​ Pressure against vessels wall helps create one way flow
○​ Found everywhere except bones, teeth, and nervous system
○​ Lacteals
■​ Special lymphatic capillaries found in the villi of intestines
■​ Lymph fluid within lacteals is called chyle
●​ Lymphatic collecting vessels
○​ Lymph from lymphatic capillaries travels here next
○​ Composed of three tunics (like a vein but thinner)
●​ Lymphatic trunks
○​ Drain major areas of the body
○​ Larger lymphatic vessels
○​ Names based on their location
■​ Bronchomediastinal: thoracic cavity
■​ Subclavian: head
■​ Jugular: neck and head
■​ Lumbar: lower body, lower limbs
■​ Intestinal: abdominal cavity
●​ Lymphatic ducts
○​ Two of them → right and thoracic
○​ Right
■​ Drains top part of the body (head, upper limbs, upper thoracic cavity)
○​ Thoracic
■​ Found on left side of the body
■​ Drains everything else (everything below upper thoracic cavity)
○​ Lymph collected from the body is drained into the circulatory system, both ducts
drain into the jugular subclavian junction
○​ Cisterna chyli = origin of the thoracic duct

Lymphatic capillaries → lymphatic collecting vessels → lymphatic trunks → lymphatic
ducts

●​ Factors assisting lymphatic flow

, ○​ Valves: more than in veins, prevent backflow
○​ Muscular pump: muscle contraction moves lymph by putting pressure on the
vessels, physical activity increases lymph flow
○​ Respiratory pump: negative pressure caused by breathing pulls fluid towards the
thoracic cavity
○​ Arterial pumping: blood pushing through arteries compresses lymphatic vessels
○​ Smooth muscle contraction: peristalsis, wave like contractions of the smooth
muscle in lymphatic vessel walls, needs this extra assistance because pressure
in lymphatic vessels is so low

Differentiate the lymphoid cells
●​ Lymphocytes
○​ Specific immunity, genetically programmed to only attack certain things
○​ We have the ability to attack pathogens before ever encountering thing because
of our genetics
○​ Immunocompetence = developmental process where lymphocytes gain the ability
to detect their specific antigen (gain receptors), don't truly become activated until
they encounter an antigen
○​ B cells
■​ Become immunocompetent in bone marrow
■​ Produce antibodies
■​ Antibodies tag foreign things to be destroyed by other parts of the
immune system
○​ T cells
■​ Become immunocompetent in the thymus
■​ Have ability to directly attack foreign cells
●​ Macrophages
○​ Nonspecific, phagocytic cell
○​ Monocytes after diapedesis
○​ Activate T-cells → T-cells destroy macrophages after they consume a foreign
substance
○​ Macrophage eats foreign thing → hangs out → t-cells destroys both
(macrophage and foreign thing)
●​ dendritic cells
○​ Nonspecific, phagocytic cell
○​ Also activates t-cells
●​ Reticular cells
○​ Does not interact with foreign things
○​ Produce a stroma → fibrous network that support all the other cells, site of
lymphoid cell collection
○​ Foreign substances are filtered out of lymph as they push through the stroma so
they cannot enter the bloodstream
●​ Lymphoid tissue
○​ Proliferation site for lymphocytes

, ○​ Allows detection of infection or damage, filters
○​ Nodular tissue = reticular cells, stroma
○​ Macrophages attach to the stroma, lymphocytes are in interstitial space so they
can move with the lymph and process it
○​ Thymus is NOT reticular

List the lymphoid organs, discuss their functions, identify their histological makeup and compare
their modes of action
●​ Lymph nodes
○​ Principle lymphatic organs
○​ Thousands in the body
○​ Cluster along lymphatic collecting vessels
○​ Collection of nodular tissue = filter
○​ Lymphatic cells in stroma of lymph nodes cleanse lymph as it passes through
○​ Help control the spread of things in the body
○​ Major collections of lymph nodes in the groin, back of neck, armpits → inflame
when we have an infection
○​ Action
■​ Lymph enters via afferent lymphatic vessels (several entry points)
■​ Filters through sinuses/space
■​ Exits through efferent lymphatic vessels at hilus
■​ More afferent than efferent allows lymph to have processing time within
the lymph node
●​ Spleen
○​ Largest lymphatic organ (about the size of your fist)
○​ Accumulation of lymphocytes
○​ Anything foreign found in the spleen can activate an immune response
○​ Filters blood → Blood runs through the spleen and the spleen removes aging or
damaged blood cells, utilizes proliferation of macrophages
○​ Liver recycles RBCs but components and platelets are stored in the spleen
○​ Produces RBCs in embryo until bone marrow is formed enough to take over
○​ Action
■​ Blood delivered via splenic artery
■​ Lymph filtered by lymphocytes in white pulp
■​ Lymph filtered by macrophages in red pulp
■​ Cleansed fluid returns to splenic vein and is back in circulation
■​ ALL BLOOD PASSES THROUGH THE SPLEEN
●​ Thymus
○​ Shrinks with age
○​ Immunocompetent site for t-lymphocytes
○​ Produces hormones that signal production of WBCs
○​ Stuff we are exposed to when we are young sets t-lymphocytes up for later in life
○​ Action
■​ Most prominent in newborns and declines with age

Document information

Uploaded on
February 11, 2026
Number of pages
24
Written in
2023/2024
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
John cummings
Contains
All classes
$8.49
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
avamoniz

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
avamoniz Clemson University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
-
Member since
1 month
Number of followers
0
Documents
7
Last sold
-

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Trending documents

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions