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Immunology of Adenoid
& Tonsil
By
Dr. T. Balasubramanian M.S. D.L.O.
Immunologically, tonsils and adenoid are
predominently B cell organs.
B lymphocytes comprise 60 % of all adenotonsillar
lymphocytes, where as T cells constitute the rest 40 %. The immunoreactive lymphoid
cells of adenoid and tonsils are found in 4 distinct areas
i.e.
1.
Reticular cell epithelium
2. Extra follicular
areas
3. Mantle zone
4. Germinal centre of
follicles
Adenoid and tonsils are involved in inducing
secretory immunity.
They also play a vital role in regulating secretory
immunoglobin production.
Their antigen uptake is more or less similar to that of
Payer's patches of epithelium in the bowel. Tonsil is infact
particularly designed for direct transport of foreign material from
exterior to lymphoid cells.
The tonsillar crypts play a vital role in this
mechanism. These crypts
infact not only increases the surface area of the tonsil, it also
transports the antigen to the lymphoid
follicles.
Human tonsils are immunologically most active
between 4 - 10 years of age.
Involution of tonsils begin after puberty, resulting in a
decrease in the ratio of T:B cells. In patients with tonsillitis
and adenoiditis, inflammation of surface epithelium results in
shedding of immunologically active cells and decrease in antigenic
transport leading on to their subsequent replacement with stratified
squamous epithelium.
These changes in turn lead to a decrease in the activation of
local B cell system, thereby causing an over all decrease in
antibody production.
In contrast to recurrent tonsillitis, the
changes are less pronounced in adenoid hypertrophy where the immuno
regulatory function is still
intact. Adenoid
and tonsils are activve immunologic organs responsible for the
mucosal immunity of the entire aero digestive
tract.
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