Ovido
Idioma
  • Inglês
  • Espanhol
  • Francês
  • Português
  • Alemão
  • Italiano
  • Holandês
  • Polonês
  • Sueco
Texto
  • Maiúsculas

Usuário

  • Entrar
  • Criar conta
  • Atualizar para Premium
Ovido
  • Início
  • Entrar
  • Criar conta

lymphatic system and Immunity

returns tissue fluid to the blood to maintain blood volume and protect the body against pathogens and other foreign material.

Lymphatic System

the tissue fluid that enters lymph capillaries

Lymph

Where Dead-end lymph capillaries are found in most tissue spaces; collect tissue fluid and proteins

Lymph vessels

The structure of larger lymph vessels is like that of veins; valves prevent the backflow of lymph

Lymph vessels

Lymph from the lower body and upper left quadrant enters the _________ and is returned to the blood in the _________

thoracic duct and left subclavian vein

Lymph from the upper right quadrant enters the ___________ and is returned to the blood in the___________.

right lymphatic duct and right subclavian vein

encapsulated masses of lymphatic tissue

Lymph Nodes

are activated and fixed plasma cells produce antibodies to foreign antigens

lymphocytes

small unencapsulated masses of lymphatic tissue and destroy pathogens that penetrate the epithelium of the respiratory, digestive, urinary, or reproductive tracts.

Lymph Nodules

are those of the small intestine

Peyer's patches

located in the upper left abdominal quadrant behind the stomach produces RBCs.

Spleen

contains lymphocytes to be activated and fixed plasma cells that produce antibodies

fetal spleen

contains monocytes and fixed macrophages (RE cells) that phagocytize pathogens and old RBCs, bilirubin is formed and sent to the liver for excretion in bile stores platelets and destroys damaged platelets

fetal spleen

inferior to the thyroid gland, in the fetus and infant it is large; with age it shrinks

Thymus

Produces other cells and thymic hormones that enable T cells to become immunologically competent: able to recognize foreign antigens and provide immunity

Thymus

the ability to destroy foreign antigens and prevent future cases of certain infectious diseases.

Immunity

Chemical markers that identify cells

Antigens

living epidermal cells secrete defensins

Unbroken stratum corneum and sebum

macrophages, neutrophils, eosinophils, macrophages also activate the lymphocytes of adaptive immunity

Phagocytes

activate lymphocytes

Langerhans cells and other dendritic cells

destroy foreign cells by rupturing their cell membranes

Natural killer cells

produce histamine and leukotrienes

Basophils and mast cells

in the embryo are produced in the thymus and ROM, they require the hormones of the thymus for maturation; migrate to the spleen, lymph nodes, and nodules

T lymphocytes (T cells)

in the embryo are produced in the RBM, migrate to the spleen, lymph nodes, and nodules.

B lymphocytes (B cells)

strongly initiate one or both of the immune mechanisms. cell -mediated immunity and antibody-mediated immunity.

Helper T cells

(Cell-mediated immunity) recognize the foreign antigen, are antigen specific, and begin to divide to form different groups of T cells.

Helper T cells

(Cell-mediated immunity) will remember the specific foreign antigen.

Memory B cells

(Antibody-mediated immunity)will remember the specific foreign antigen.

Memory T cells

(Antibody-mediated immunity) chemically destroy foreign cells and produce cytokines to attract macrophages.

Cytotoxic (killer) T cells

Crosses the placenta to provide passive immunity for newborns

Blood

Provides long term immunity following recovery or a vaccine

Extracellular fluid

Present in breast milk to provide possible immunity to breastfed infants

External secretions

Produced by the maturing immune system of infants

Blood

Produce first during an infection

Blood

Receptors on b lymphocytes

B lymphocytes

Important in allergic reaction

Mast cells or basophils

Does not involved antibodies; is programmed in dna

Genetic

Antibodies from another source

Passive immunity

Placenta transmission of antibodies from mother to fetus

Natural immunity

Injection of preformed antibodies

Artificial immunity

Production of one's own antibodies

Active immunity

Recovery from a disease with production of antibodies and memory cells

Natural immunity

A vaccine stimulates production of antibodies and memory cells

Artificial immunity

Quiz
pp all
Eng ka
voc 5 fr
voc 5
reli hü
Källkritik
fonds de commerce
voc engels unit 5
So
religon
toidud
05d
05d
05d
05d
05d
05 D
sectio 17 & 47
working together
Pronoun - Ayaana
poesía posguerra
nioiiiiii
Chap 1 Geo theme2
Unit 9
saksa k
französisch
deutsch
ATM
Vokabeln Unit 9
Word Files Unit 9
history reviw
Lag och rätt
Rythme Narratif FRA 11
pp resilienz
mental maths
w.w.II
Kropp och hälsa
Bewegingen
Segnali e Mire
musik
Glosor månd 4/5
mots
Salutogenese
Poignet / Muneca-mano
Repaso Final
Naturbrukets historia
soc
CHAP 4 DIGESTIF
sociologi 2
glosor