| • Low power view of a lobe of a normal thymus:
• Even at this power, the organization of a thymus into a darker staining cortex and a more likely staining medulla is clear.
• Notice that the entire field is filled with small, deeply hematoxylin (blue) staining cells. |
| Normal |
| Etiology |
•N/A |
| Pathogenesis |
•N/A |
| Epidemiology |
•N/A |
| Clinical |
•N/A |
| General Gross Description |
•The thymus is a lymphoid organ that develops from the
third and forth pharyngeal pouches.
•It descends to the anterior part of the mediastinum,
where it develops following influx of lymphocyte
progenitors from the developing hemopoietic system.
•In the adult, the thymocyte precursors come from the
bone marrow.
•The thymus is largest relative to the size of the
individual at birth, weighing between 5 and 10 grams.
•It increases in size to about 50 grams at the time of
adolescence and subsequently involutes through adult
life, until a fibro-fatty remnant is left behind in old
age.
•It is a roughly pyramidal, white, bi-lobed organ located anterior to the heart and great vessels and posterior to the sternum. |
| General Micro Description |
•Histologically, the thymus is divided into 2 lobes and
several lobules by thin, fibrous septae.
•The thymus is composed of 2 cellular components --
epithelial cells derived from the endoderm of the
pharyngeal pouches and lymphocytes of hemopoietic
(bone marrow) origin.
•Histologically, the thymus has a distinct cortex and
medulla.
•The medulla has distinct, concentrically arranged nests
of squamous epithelium, known as Hassels corpuscles.
•The cortex has more densely packed lymphocytes, whereas the medulla has relatively less densely packed lymphocytes, with interspersed epithelial cells that form an intricate interlacing dendritic network. |
| Reference |
| Bloom and Fawcett: A textbook of Histology. 12th
Edition. Chapman & Hall. 1994. pp 332
Gray: Gray^s Anatomy. 15th Edition. Barnes & Noble
Books. 1995. pp 966 et seq.
|