This is where cells of our body removes oxygen from the blood and starts throwing carbon
dioxide back into the blood. The blood is deoxygenated because it no longer has oxygen, it has a
lot of carbon dioxide. As the heart squeezes, the blood is under pressure inside the arteries. The
walls of these capillaries have holes in them due to the pressure. What oozes out is just the
plasma. RCS Can't ooze out because the holes are too small for them to go out. The plasma
comes out with a bit of proteins. So some small proteins, not big ones, but some small protein
also oozes out along with this plasma. This is what we call the lymph. The cells of lymph
capillaries have a bit of overlapping structures. The walls open up when they are surrounded by
this lymph fluid in the tissue. In the tissue. The fluid starts pressing on the walls. And as it
pushes from inside, look at what happens to these walls, they will start closing now. So it's like a
one.
Since lymph is basically plasma leaking out from the blood, it makes sense to put it back into
the bloodstream. Lymph vessels eventually connect to one of the blood vessels to recycle lymph
back into our circulatory system. But a question for you would be, done you think we should
connect these lymph vessels to an artery. Or a vein. The lymph vessels also help in killing
unwanted stuff from your body. These lymph vessels are also found near the small intestine. If
any of your lymph vessels pick up a lot of bacteria, then a lot will gather in that lymph node and
that node will swell. This means swollen nodes are an early indication of infections. If they're
swollen, good chance. There's an infection somewhere.
dioxide back into the blood. The blood is deoxygenated because it no longer has oxygen, it has a
lot of carbon dioxide. As the heart squeezes, the blood is under pressure inside the arteries. The
walls of these capillaries have holes in them due to the pressure. What oozes out is just the
plasma. RCS Can't ooze out because the holes are too small for them to go out. The plasma
comes out with a bit of proteins. So some small proteins, not big ones, but some small protein
also oozes out along with this plasma. This is what we call the lymph. The cells of lymph
capillaries have a bit of overlapping structures. The walls open up when they are surrounded by
this lymph fluid in the tissue. In the tissue. The fluid starts pressing on the walls. And as it
pushes from inside, look at what happens to these walls, they will start closing now. So it's like a
one.
Since lymph is basically plasma leaking out from the blood, it makes sense to put it back into
the bloodstream. Lymph vessels eventually connect to one of the blood vessels to recycle lymph
back into our circulatory system. But a question for you would be, done you think we should
connect these lymph vessels to an artery. Or a vein. The lymph vessels also help in killing
unwanted stuff from your body. These lymph vessels are also found near the small intestine. If
any of your lymph vessels pick up a lot of bacteria, then a lot will gather in that lymph node and
that node will swell. This means swollen nodes are an early indication of infections. If they're
swollen, good chance. There's an infection somewhere.