Lymphatic.
respiratory
no
Lymphatic system
Cardiovascular System
Yes, blood is not considered an organ of the cardiovascular system. Blood is a fluid connective tissue that circulates through the cardiovascular system, which consists of the heart and blood vessels.
Yes
That would be the lymphatic system.
The orgin on lymph is this: the cardiovascular system pumps blood through its system but it cannot return all the fluid from the body cells. The lymph system picks up 60%of the fluid dropped off at the cellular level, at this point we are talking about interstial fluid, the IF picks up plasma and becomes tissue fluid. The tissue fluid is then picked up my lymph capillaries, the tissue fluid is now called lymph.
If I'm reading what you're asking correctly, the circulatory system is made up of the cardiovascular system and the lymphatic system. The cardiovascular system transports blood and other nutrients (and blood wastes) throughout the body. The lymphatic system provides an accessory route to transport filtered blood plasma to/from interstitial fluid and the blood. The cardiovascular system works with the peripheral nervous system to maintain the pumping of the heart as well as blood pressure (through vasodilation/vasoconstriction), and the respiratory system (influx of oxygen to blood, efflux of carbon dioxide from blood). The endocrine system also has effects, modulating electrolyte and water levels, which affects blood pressure.
The name for fluid build up in the kidneys is called edema. The lymphatic system is not returning excess fluid back to the blood as it should.
the lymphatic system only carries fluid away from tissues
The lymph system, including lymph nodes and lymph vessels.