To the blood stream.
Lymph vessels return intercellular fluid to the bloodstream near the heart, where it becomes part of the blood plasma. This process helps maintain fluid balance in the body and supports the immune system by transporting lymphocytes and other immune cells.
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.
A collection of organs and vessels that return lymph, extra fluid, to the blood stream.
Yes
I believe the answer is the Lymph
Fluids and particles absorbed into lymph capillaries are called lymph.
Interstitial fluid
Red blood cells does not have a direct contact with the body cells.A substance called the tissue fluid does.It leaks out from the blood capillaries carrying oxygen and food substance to the body cells.It then carry waste materials out of the body cells.However, some of this substance does return to the blood while some are collected in the lymph vessel.The tissue fluid in the lymph vessel is called lymph.
Lymph nodes can produce and contain lymph fluid, but they do not typically leak fluid. If a lymph node is damaged or infected, it may become enlarged or tender, but leakage of lymphatic fluid from a lymph node is not a common occurrence.
Fluid and particles absorbed into lymph capillaries
lymph capillary Lymph fluid is filtered in lymph nodes. Lymph nodes are along lymph vessels which that run along blood vessels. Lymph vessels draw in interstitial fluid (fluid between cells) and it them becomes lymph fluid. Lymph nodules are in connective tissue in place of high traffic and does not function as a filter because it's not along a lymph vessel.
Lymphatic fluid, or lymph, originates from interstitial fluid, which is the fluid that surrounds cells in tissues. It is formed when excess fluid, proteins, and waste products from blood capillaries seep into the spaces between cells. The lymphatic system collects this fluid through lymphatic capillaries, which transport it through lymph nodes and eventually return it to the bloodstream.