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lymph node

Friday 10 June 2005

Components

 nodal cortex

  • nodal follicular compartment

 nodal paracortical compartment ( nodal paracortex )
 nodal sinusoidal compartment

Movement of the immune cell through the lymph node

Naive T cells enter the lymph node through high endothelial venules, which express the chemokine CCL21 (secondary lymphoid-tissue chemokine, or SLC).

Antigen-presenting cells, dendritic cells, and macrophages enter the lymph node through afferent lymphatics. Mature dendritic cells express CCR7, and macrophages express CCR2.

T cells and dendritic cells together localize in the T-cell zone in a CCR7-dependent manner. Antigen presentation results in the activation of T cells, and effector T cells exit the lymph node through the efferent lymphatics.

B cells are recruited to the follicles, where CXCL13 (B-cell chemoattractant 1 [BCA-1]) is present.

Pathology : nodal pathology / nodal histopathology

 nodal anomalies
 nodal lesional syndromes
 nodal diseases
 nodal tumors

Videos

 Histology of the lymph node (by Washington Deceit)

 Reticulin fibers in the lymph node (by Washington Deceit)

See also

 nodal follicular compartment
 nodal paracortical compartment ( nodal paracortex )
 nodal sinusoidal compartment
 germinal centers
 D2-40+ CD31+ perifollicular sinus around most of the follicular compartment
 bcl-6-negative monocytoid B-cells
 Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)
 histiocyte-rich B-cell proliferations
 prominence of the perifollicular sinus
 reactive lymphadenitis
 lymphatic
 cytokines
 lymph fluid
 normal and altered germinal center reactions
 sinus drainage
 nodal T-cell lymphomas

Open references

 Histopathology of the Lymph Nodes. Susan A. Elmore. 2007. doi : 10.1080/01926230600964722