THE IMMUNE SYSTEM

_______________ SYSTEM:

Includes lymph, lymphocytes, lymphatic vessels, lymph _______________, _______________, the spleen, and the _______________ gland.
 

Function:
1. _______________ balance - fluid returns from the tissues to the blood by way of lymphatic vessels.
2. _________ absorption - absorbs fat and other substances through special vessels called lacteals.
3. _______________ - filters microorganisms & other substances from lymph that flows through lymph nodes and in the spleen.
 

Lymphatic Structure:

Tonsils:


Tonsils contain large amounts of _______________ and provide protection against pathogens entering the body through the nose or mouth.

Lymph Nodes: rounded structures distributed along lymphatic vessels, large groups of nodes located in the _______________, _______________ region, and _______________ region.

Lymph nodes consist of lymphatic tissue containing large numbers of lymphocytes, and lymphatic sinuses containing _______________. Lymph enters the node through _______________ vessels and leaves through _______________ vessels.

As lymph moves through the body microoganisms in the lymph stimulate lymphocytes to divide and spread. Macrophages also remove microorganisms by _______________.

_______________: located in the left superior corner of the abdominal cavity; filters blood, not lymph; contains lymphoid tissue that remove foreign substances, destroys worn out erythrocytes and stimulates division of lymphocytes.

_______________: triangular gland located in the middle of the thoracic cavity, decreasing in size in adults; functions as a site for the production and maturation of lymphocytes. After maturation lymphocytes enter the blood and travel to other lymphatic tissues such as the tonsils and lymph nodes.
 

IMMUNE SYSTEM CELLS

_______________ - type of white blood cells;

most important of immune cells, estimated 1 trillion lymphocytes in body.

Phagocytes - cells that carry on phagocytosis, the ingestion and digestion of foreign cells or particles; includes two types of white cells , _______________ and _______________, as well as _______________. _______________ is an accumulation of dead neutrophils at the site of infection. Macrophages are monocytes that leave blood, enter tissues, and enlarge approximately 5 X's.

_______________ Cells - release inflammatory chemicals.

_______________ Cells (natural killer cells) - a type of lymphocyte that kills tumor and virus-infected cells using chemical mediators to destroy the cells.
 

CHEMICAL MEDIATORS:

These chemicals produce several effects:


IMMUNE SYSTEM CELLS

LYMPHOCYTES -

Types: _______________ cells and _______________ cells

Development of _______________ cells - primitive stem cells migrate from marrow to "bursa-equivalent" structure, perhaps the liver

"Bursa-equivalent" comes from the Bursa of Fabricius where B cells were first discovered to develop in chickens.

Development of T Cells - Stem cells from the marrow migrate to the _______________ gland. There are about 5 T cells for every B cell.
 

There are three main types of T cells:

Stem cells develop into T cells in thymus in months prior to and after birth; T cells migrate to _______________.

T cells develop into _______________ T cells when antigens bind to cell surface.
 

T cells produce _______________ immunity by directly killing the invading cells with lymphotoxins, by releasing chemicals that attract _______________ to them, chemotactic factor and macrophage activating factor.

B CELLS:

B Cells produce _______________ immunity by circulating antibodies in the blood.

_______________ - called immunoglobulins or gamma globulins

Antibodies have concave combining sites on their surface that "fit" a specific antigen's combining site called an _______________.

Antibodies bind to antigens to form complexes that act in several ways to deactivate the antigens.

1. _______________ toxins

2. _______________ of invading cells

3. _______________ - "prepare for eating" - helps phagocytes attach and digest

4. Initiates the binding of _______________

TYPES OF IMMUNITY:
Active natural immunity - results from _______________
Active artificial immunity - results from _______________
Passive natural immunity - results from transfer of _______________ from mother to child during pregnancy and breastfeeding
_______________ artificial immunity - results from injecting antibodies produced in another organism; it's only temporary

AIDS -  ACQUIRED IMMUNE _______________ SYNDROME
First diagnosed in 1981.  Caused by a _______________ (a virus with RNA instead of DNA in its genes) that uses an enzyme to make DNA from RNA.  It integrates its genes into the DNA of T cells.  The T cells are destroyed causing a shortage of T cells to fight disease.
Virus was called HTLV-III.  Now called HIV, Human _______________ Virus.

AIDS disease goes through several stages, with symptoms that may not appear for 5-10 years.

Stage I - _______________ Infection
No symptoms except for possible mono-type symptoms 2 to 5 weeks later.  No antibodies can be detected for 8 to 10 weeks.

Stage II - _______________ Carrier State
No symptoms but will have antibodies and other abnormal lab findings.

Stage III - ARC (_______________ )
Generalized illness, with or without night sweats, fever, diarrhea, weight loss, fatigue, and rare infections such as oral candidiasis, persistent vaginal candidiasis, and herpes zoster

Stage IV - Full Blown AIDS
Deficient immune system not due to known causes such as drugs, cancer, or other diseases; presence of opportunistic infections such as cryptococcal meningitis, Pneumocystis _______________ pneumonia, _______________'s sarcoma, Tuberculosis, _______________ simplex viruses