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Waldeyer's tonsillar ring

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Waldeyer's ring
Regional lymphatics. Waldeyer ring labeled at center top.
Details
SystemLymphatic system
Identifiers
Latinanulus lymphoideus pharyngis
Anatomical terminology

Waldeyer's tonsillar ring (pharyngeal lymphoid ring, Waldeyer's lymphatic ring, or tonsillar ring) is a ringed arrangement of lymphoid organs in the pharynx. Waldeyer's ring surrounds the naso- and oropharynx, with some of its tonsillar tissue located above and some below the soft palate (and to the back of the mouth cavity).

Structure

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The ring consists of the (from top to bottom):

Terminology

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Some authors speak of two pharyngeal tonsils/two adenoids. These authors simply look at the left and right halves of the pharyngeal tonsil as two tonsils. Many authors also speak of lingual tonsils (in the plural), because this accumulation of lymphoid tissue consists of a number of little prominences – many smaller rounded masses. Whether to collectively call all these a single tonsil or separate tonsils is to an extent an arbitrary decision.[citation needed]

Variation

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There also normally is a good amount of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) present between all these tonsils (intertonsillar) around the ring, and more of this lymphoid tissue can variably be found more or less throughout at least the naso- and oropharynx.[citation needed]

Development

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The tubal tonsils usually develop from an accumulation of lymphoid tissue in the pharyngeal tonsil.[citation needed]

Clinical significance

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The palatine tonsils when inflamed/swollen, more common in children, can obstruct respiration.[1]

Inflammation of the tonsils is called tonsillitis and removal is called tonsillectomy.[1]

Etymology of Waldeyer's ring

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Waldeyer's ring was named after the nineteenth-century German anatomist Heinrich Wilhelm Gottfried von Waldeyer-Hartz.[2]

Other animals

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Some animals, but not humans, have one or two additional tonsils:

  • Soft palate tonsil
  • Paraepiglottic tonsil

References

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  1. ^ a b "Tonsillitis - Symptoms and causes". Mayo Clinic. Retrieved 2020-11-09.
  2. ^ synd/2061 at Who Named It?