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CRR Histology Lab 6 Lymphatic System CRR Week 8

Lymphoid tissues are organized accumulations of lymphocytes, which appear at various sites distributed throughout the
body. Wherever lymphocytes accumulate, there may be sites of lymphocyte proliferation called lymph nodules or
lymphoid follicles. Each lymph nodule is characterized by a relatively pale "germinal center" and by a darker "cap".
NOTE: Under the microscope, lymphoid tissue is most readily appreciated at low magnification.
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Slide 40, Peyer's patches in intestine. parenchyma, called "red pulp", is rich in blood where
Small sites of lymphocyte accumulation, often lymphoid tissue and blood are intermixed and served by a
including organized lymph nodules, may occur anywhere network of vascular sinusoids.
along the mucosa of any hollow organ. Particularly large "Recognition characters" for spleen are large size
patches, each with several lymph nodules, are (compared to other lymphoid tissues), patches of dense
characteristic of ileum and are called Peyer's patches. lymphoid tissue ("white pulp") surrounding small arteries,
On this slide of three regions of intestine, only one remaining tissue ("red pulp") with intermixed RBCs and
section includes conspicuous lymphoid tissue. The lymphocytes, and occasional small patches of collagen
accumulated lymphocytes, crowded together into sizeable (trabeculae).
masses of small, intensely-basophilic cells, may even be
visible without the microscope. Slide 96, Lymph Node.
Lymph nodes are small organs scattered throughout
Slide 44, Appendix. the body at sites you should learn (someday) in gross
The appendix might be described as an "intestinal anatomy.
tonsil", a pocket lined by intestinal epithelium with Lymph typically enters a lymph node through several
abundant lymphoid tissue, including lymph nodules, in small lymphatic vessels that penetrate the capsule and
the mucosa. See tonsils (below) for more description. open into the cortex. Lymph percolates through the
cortex and medulla and then exits through a larger
Slide 92, Thymus. lymphatic vessel. Blood vessels serving lymph nodes
Superficially, the thymus resembles a gland may include "high-endothelium venules", with cuboidal
subdivided into numerous small lobules. But the thymus rather than squamous endothelium.
has no ducts and no proper secretory tissue. Its principle "Recognition characteristics" for lymph nodes include
"secretion" is lymphocytes. In an active (i.e., young) small size (compared to spleen), oval or kidney-bean
thymus, the cortex of each lobule is densely packed with shape, a thin capsule of collagen, and a cortex containing
lymphocytes while each lobule has a paler medullary core lymph nodules wrapping part way around a medulla in
where cells are dividing. Small patches of peculiar which lymphocytes are not organized into lymph nodules.
epithelial tissue ("Hassall's corpuscles") may be visible.
Slide 97, Reticular tissue.
Slides 93 and 94, Tonsils. "Reticular" describes connective tissues, including
Crypts -- Tonsils are lymphoid tissue of the spleen and lymph nodes, whose matrix is supported by
oropharynx. Tonsilar lymphoid tissue is arranged around reticular fibers. Reticular fibers are one of the several
crevices or pockets ("crypts") which are lined by special forms of collagen (type III collagen). They are
epithelium. In pharyngeal tonsils, these crevices are lined unstained by H&E, but they can be visualized with silver
by respiratory epithelium (ciliated pseudostratified stains, as in this specimen.
columnar). In palatine and lingual tonsils, crypts are lined To determine the source of this specimen, compare it
by oral epithelium (nonkeratinized stratified squamous). with your slides of spleen and lymph node.
Lymphocytes wander freely across this epithelium and
typically obscure its appearance.
Lymph nodules -- Lymphocytes are organized into
oval clusters called lymph nodules (or lymphoid follicles). SAQ slides.
These are most conspicuous at low power, where the At least one (maybe more) of the CRR SAQ slides
germinal center of each nodule (where lymphocytes are should recognizably represent some region(s) of the
proliferating) appears paler than the surrounding mass of lymphatic system. Find any such slide(s), identify the
lymphocytes migrating in and out of the germinal centers. region(s), and repeat appropriate observation of detailed
features as described above.
Slide 95, Spleen.
In the spleen, loose lymphoid cells and blood cells are
contained within a fibrous connective tissue capsule and
supported by strands of fibrous connective tissue


("trabeculae"). Arterioles entering the spleen are
At your discretion, you may notify an instructor
surrounded by lymphoid tissue (which may contain lymph
for a brief oral evaluation on this material.
nodules) forming the so-called "white pulp". In between
patches of white pulp, the majority of the splenic
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