GENERAL HISTOLOGY

LYMPHATIC

LYMPHATIC SYSTEM

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
What happens to the thymus after puberty?
A
it gets bigger
B
it becomes more active
C
it begins to shrink
D
it stops working
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -Your thymus actually starts making T-cells before you’re born. It keeps producing T-cells and you have all the T-cells you need by the time you reach puberty. After puberty, your thymus gland slowly starts to decrease in size and is replaced by fat.

Detailed explanation-2: -A critical immune organ called the thymus shrinks rapidly with age, putting older individuals at greater risk for life-threatening infections. A new study reveals that thymus atrophy may stem from a decline in its ability to protect against DNA damage from free radicals.

Detailed explanation-3: -First of all, it is important to underline that the human thymus develops during fetal life, reaches its maximal output during early postnatal life, and declines in size and output during young adulthood and throughout adult life through the process of age-related involution (Chinn et al. 2012).

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