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Lymph

The lymphatics are the drainage system of the body. Blood carries nurients to the cells and the fluid that is "between" the individual cells drains into the lymphtic system. The lymph contains white-blood-cells (called lymphocytes), proteins and desolved ions.

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12y ago
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13y ago

The clear fluid "lymph" flows through the lymphatic vessels straight to the heart. The lymphatic system serves to clean interstitial fluid from tissue, deliver APCs (antigen-presenting cells) to the lymph nodes, retain fats and fatty acids as chyle and carry them to the circulatory system, and convey immune cells to and from the lymph nodes.

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11y ago

THE LYMPHATIC SYSTEM IS COOPERATIVE

Major lymphatic ducts. (Courtesy of NIH/NCI)

  • The lymphatic system aids the immune system in removing and destroying waste, debris, dead blood cells, pathogens, toxins, and cancer cells.
  • The lymphatic system absorbs fats and fat-soluble vitamins from the digestive system and delivers these nutrients to the cells of the body where they are used by the cells.
  • The lymphatic system also removes excess fluid, and waste products from the interstitial spaces between the cells.

THE TRANSFORMATION

Arterial blood carries oxygen, nutrients, and hormones for the cells. To reach these cells it leaves the small arteries and flows into the tissues. This fluid is now known as interstitial fluid

and it delivers its nourshing products to the cells. Then it leaves the cell and removes waste products.

After this task is complete, 90% of this fluid returns to the circulatory system as venous blood.

WHAT IS LYMPH?

The remaining 10% of the fluid that stays behind in the tissues as a clear to yellowish fluid known as lymph.

  • Unlike blood, which flows throughout the body in a continue loop, lymph flows in only one direction within its own system. This flow is only upward toward the neck. Here, it flows into the venous blood stream through the subclavien veins which are located on either sides of the neck near the collarbones.
  • After plasma has delivered its nutrients and removed debris, it leaves the cells. 90% of this fluid returns to the venous circulation through the venules and continues as venous blood.
  • The remaining 10% of this fluid becomes lymph which is a watery fluid that contains waste products. This waste is protein-rich due to the undigested proteins that were removed from the cells.

LYMPHATIC CIRCULATION

The lymph is moved through the body in its own vessels making a one-way journey from the interstitial spaces to the subclavian veins at the base of the neck.

  • Since the lymphatic system does not have a heart to pump it, its upward movement depends on the motions of the muscle and joint pumps.
  • As it moves upward toward the neck the lymph passes through lymph nodes which filter it to remove debris and pathogens.
  • The cleansed lymph continues to travel in only one direction, which is upward toward the neck.
  • At the base of the neck, the cleansed lymph flows into the subclavian veins

    on either side of the neck.

Lymph returning to the
subclavian veins. © Lymph Notes

THE ORIGIN OF LYMPH

Lymph originates as plasma (the fluid portion of blood). The arterial blood

, which flows out of the heart, slows as it moves through a capillary bed. This slowing allows some plasma to leave the arterioles (small arteries) and flow into the tissues where it becomes tissue fluid.

  • Also known as extracellular fluid, this is fluid that flows between the cells but is not into the cells. This fluid delivers nutrients, oxygen, and hormones to the cells.
  • As this fluid leaves the cells, it takes with it cellular waste products and protein cells.
  • Approximately 90% of this tissue fluid flows into the small veins. Here it enters the venous circulation as plasma and continues in the circulatory system.
  • The remaining 10% of the fluid that is left behind is known as lymph.

LYMPHATIC CAPILLARIES

In order to leave the tissues, the lymph must enter the lymphatic system through specialized lymphatic capillaries. Approximately 70% of these are superficial capillarieslocated near, or just under, the skin. The remaining 30%, which are known as deep lymphatic capillaries, surround most of the body’s organs.

Lymphatic capillaries begin as blind-ended tubes that are only a single cell in thickness. These cells are arranged in a slightly overlapping pattern, much like the shingles on a roof. Each of these individual cells is fastened to nearby tissues by an anchoring filament.

LYMPHATIC VESSELS

The lymphatic capillaries gradually join together to form a mesh-like network of tubes that are located deeper in the body.

  • As they become larger, and deeper, these structures become lymphatic vessels.
  • Deeper within the body the lymphatic vessels become progressively larger and are located near major blood veins.
  • Like veins, the lymphatic vessels, which are known as lymphangions,

    have one-way valves to prevent any backward flow.

  • Smooth muscles in the walls of the lymphatic vessels cause the angions to contract sequentially to aid the flow of lymph upward toward the thoracic region. Because of their shape, these vessels are previously referred to as a string of pearls.

LYMPH NODES

Lymph nodes kill pathogens and cancer cells. They also
remove debris and excess fluids. © Lymph Notes.com

There are between 600-700 lymph nodes present in the average human body. It is the role of these nodes to filter the lymph before it can be returned to the circulatory system. Although these nodes can increase or decrease in size throughout life, any nodes that has been damaged or destroyed, does not regenerate.

  • Afferent lymphatic vessels carry unfiltered lymph into the node. Here waste products, and some of the fluid, are filtered out.
  • In another section of the node, lymphocytes, which are specialized white blood cells, kill any pathogens that may be present. This causes the swelling commonly known as swollen glands.
  • Lymph nodes also trap and destroy cancer cells to slow the spread of the cancer until they are overwhelmed by it.
  • Efferent lymphatic vessels carry the filtered lymph out of the node so that it can continue its return to the circulatory system.

DRAINAGE AREAS

Lymphatic system drainage is organized into two separate, and very unequal drainage areas. The right drainage area clears the right arm and chest. The left drainage area clears all of the other areas of the body including both legs, the lower trunk upper left of the chest, and the left arm.

Lymphatic Drainage Areas
© Lymph Notes

WHY THIS INFORMATION IS SO IMPORTANT

  • Damage disturbs the flow. When lymphatic tissues or lymph nodes have been damaged, destroyed or removed, lymph cannot drain normally from the affected area. When this happens excess lymph accumulates and results in the swelling that is characteristic of lymphedema.
  • Drainage areas. The treatment of lymphedema is based on the natural structures and the flow of lymph. The affected drainage area determines the pattern of the manual lymph drainage (MLD) and for self-massage. Although lymph does not normally cross from one area to another, MLD stimulates the flow from one area to another. It also encourages the formation of new lymph drainage pathways.
  • MLD treatment and self-massage begin by stimulating the area near the terminus and the larger lymphatic vessels. This stimulates the flow of lymph that is already in the system and frees space for the flow of the lymph that is going to enter the capillaries during the treatment.
  • MLD treatment continues as a gentle massage technique to stimulate the movement of the excess lymph in affected tissues. The rhythmic, light strokes of MLD provide just the right pressure to encourage this excess lymph to flow into the lymph capillaries.
  • The compression garments, aids, and/or bandages that are worn between treatments help control swelling by providing pressure that is needed to encourage the flow of lymph into the capillaries.
  • Exercise is important in the treatment of lymphedema because the movements of the muscles stimulate the flow of the lymph into the capillaries. Wearing a compression garment during exercise also provides resistance to further stimulate this flow.
  • Self-massage or simplified lympatic drainage, as prescribed by your therapist, is another way in which lymph is encouraged to flow into the capillaries. Each self-massage session begins at the terminus with strokes to stimulate the flow of lymph that is already in the system. This is followed by specialized strokes that encourage the flow of lymph into the capillaries and then upward to the terminus.
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10y ago

The name of the fluid that is contained within the lymphatic system is lymph or lymph fluid. This fluid is extremely watery and is comprised of cells that come from bone marrow and lymph nodes.

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13y ago

Lacteals (also found in the blood stream)

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11y ago

blood/plasma

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Q: What fluid transported through the lymph capillaries and vessels?
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Related questions

How are oxygen and nutrients passed to cells?

Capillaries allow Glucose and oxygen to move out of the blood in the capillaries into interstitial fluid and into the cells. Fluid is exchanged between capillary blood and interstitial fluid.


Waste leaves a cell and enters the blood by crossing into the capillaries?

Correct. Waste products, such as carbon dioxide and metabolic byproducts, diffuse from the cell into the surrounding interstitial fluid. From there, they can enter the capillaries, where they are then transported through the bloodstream to be eliminated from the body.


What fluid leaks out of capillaries?

go to the body cells, after that it returns to the capillaries, but the fluid that doesn't diffuses into the lymph vessels (when it goes into the lymphatic vessels it's called lymph) and goes back to the heart.


Trace the sequence of fluid flow through blood vessel to blood vessel by way of the lymphatic system?

The sequence of fluid flow is blood capillaries.... interstitial space or interstitial fluid..... lymphatic capillaries.... lymphatic vessels.... lymphatic ducts..... junction of the internal jugular and subclavian veins. Then what helps this whole sequence is the skeletal muscle pump and the respiratory pump.


What do the lymphatic vessels lead to that filter the fluid being transported?

Lymph nodes.


What happens to the food once enters the blood?

nutrients


What are the small vessels where blood exchanges various materials with cells?

The human circulatory system consists of arteries, veins, and capillaries. The capillaries are the thin-walled vessels that connect arteries and veins and allow for the exchange of materials between blood and tissue fluid.


What type of blood does ooze from a wound?

Small blood vessels called capillaries would "ooze".


When fluid bathes the cells it is called interstitial fluid when it flows through the lymphatic vessels it is called lymph?

Yes,. When interstitial fluid flows through the lymphatic vessels it is called lymph


What are the small vessels called where substances such as nutrientoxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged for substances in the tissue fluid surrounding body cells?

Capillaries


Difference between veins and lymphatic vessels?

Comparison between Lymph Vessels and Veins.Similarities.both have an interconnecting network of progressively larger vessels;both transport fluids to the heart;the larger lymph vessels have the same structure as veins, i.e. their walls have the same three layers;both have semi-lunar valves to prevent any backward flow of blood;the flow of fluid is slow but steady and at low pressure;the fluid is deoxygenated;like blood capillaries, the walls of lymph capillaries are composed of a single thin layer of squamous endothelium.Differences.the walls of lymph vessels are musch thinner and more transparent;the muscle layer in lymph vessel is much less developed, but there is more connective tissue;blood capillaries form a continuous, open circuit, whereas lymph capillaries end blindly in the tissues;lymph capillaries have a larger diameter than blood capillaries;lymph capillaries have walls which are more permeable than the walls of blood capillaries. Consequently, larger molecules (such as proteins) are able to diffuse through them.


What is the passage of lymph through lymph vessels?

Arteries Arterioles Blood capillaries Interstitial fluid Lymph capillaries Lymphatic vessels Lymph trunks Thoracic ducts or right lymphatic duct Subclavian veins (blood)