Lymphatic vessels are vein-like tubes connected at one end to the tiny organs known as lymph nodes, which carry the lymph (serum full of white blood cells) from the lymph node to the heart.
Lymphatic nodes are part of the Lymphatic System, which helps the Immune System fight against pathogens. Whenever you get sick with the flu or some similar virus, your lymph nodes can become swollen--this is why doctors feel the side of your throat when they check you over at an appointment! They're checking to see if your tonsils (lymph nodes in your throat) are swollen.
they're called lymph nodes
Lymph nodes
lymph nodes
Lymph nodes
Lymphnodes
There are different forms of mesenchymal cells and tissues found almost everywhere in the body, and these tissues can be thought of, broadly, as: connective tissues, blood vessels, and lymphatic vessels.Mesenchymal cells/ tissues originate from the middle embryonic germ layer (there are 3 - endoderm, mesoderm, ectoderm) called the "mesoderm" and differentiate into the body's various connective tissues found in bone, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, muscles, skin, organs, extracellular matrix, as they also form the blood vessels and lymphatic vessels.
your ball sack Um NO! The answer is lymphatic vessels and cardiovascular.
There isn't another name for the Lymphatic System, although the Lymphatic System is closely related to the Immune System because both fight germs. Collectively, they are called the Immunolymphatic System.
All over your body. They converge in specific places like your arm pits.
Lymph vessels,lymph nodes,spleen,
Lymphnodes
no
in lymphatic vessels
Endothelium provides a slick, friction-reducing lining in lymphatic vessels and in all hollow organs of the cardiovascular system- blood vessels and the heart. Mesothelium is the epithelium found in serous membranes, the membranes lining the ventral body cavity and covering its organs.
There are different forms of mesenchymal cells and tissues found almost everywhere in the body, and these tissues can be thought of, broadly, as: connective tissues, blood vessels, and lymphatic vessels.Mesenchymal cells/ tissues originate from the middle embryonic germ layer (there are 3 - endoderm, mesoderm, ectoderm) called the "mesoderm" and differentiate into the body's various connective tissues found in bone, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, muscles, skin, organs, extracellular matrix, as they also form the blood vessels and lymphatic vessels.
your ball sack Um NO! The answer is lymphatic vessels and cardiovascular.
smooth
Lymphocytes.
There isn't another name for the Lymphatic System, although the Lymphatic System is closely related to the Immune System because both fight germs. Collectively, they are called the Immunolymphatic System.
All over your body. They converge in specific places like your arm pits.
The primary lymphoid organs in the body are the lymph nodes. This is incorrect. Primary lymphatic organs are site where stem cells divide and become immunocompetent, capable of mounting an immune response. Therefore the primary lymphatic organs are the Red bone Marrow, in flat bones and epiphyses of long bones, and in the Thymus.