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The spleen is located in the upper left abdominal cavity, just
beneath the diaphragm, and posterior to the stomach. It is similar
to a lymph node in shape and structure but it is much larger. The
spleen is the largest lymphatic organ in the body. Surrounded by
a connective tissue capsule, which extends inward to divide the
organ into lobules, the spleen consists of two types of tissue called
white pulp and red pulp. The white pulp is lymphatic tissue consisting
mainly of lymphocytes around arteries. The red pulp consists of
venous sinuses filled with blood and cords of lymphatic
cells, such as lymphocytes and macrophages. Blood enters
the spleen through the splenic artery, moves through the
sinuses where it is filtered, then leaves through the splenic
vein.
The spleen filters blood in much the way that the lymph
nodes filter lymph. Lymphocytes in the spleen react to pathogens
in the blood and attempt to destroy them. Macrophages then
engulf the resulting debris, the damaged cells, and the
other
large particles. The
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spleen, along with the liver, removes old and damaged erythrocytes
from the circulating blood. Like other lymphatic tissue, it produces
lymphocytes, especially in response to invading pathogens. The sinuses
in the spleen are a reservoir for blood. In emergencies such as hemorrhage,
smooth muscle in the vessel walls and in the capsule of the spleen
contracts. This squeezes the blood out of the spleen into the general
circulation.

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