Q.68 Being a medical science student, in your very first anatomical investigation of a female body, arrange the order of appearnce of following organs of immunological importance, in anterior to posterior direction in the body. (A). Thymus (B). Adenoids (C). Peyer's patches (D). Spleen Choose the correct answer from the options given below: 1. (A), (B), (C), (D). 2. (B), (D), (A), (C). 3. (B), (A), (D), (C). 4. (C), (B), (D), (A).

Q.68 Being a medical science student, in your very first anatomical investigation of a female body, arrange the order of
appearnce of following organs of immunological importance, in anterior to posterior direction in the body.

(A). Thymus

(B). Adenoids

(C). Peyer’s patches

(D). Spleen

Choose the correct answer from the options given below:

1. (A), (B), (C), (D).
2. (B), (D), (A), (C).
3. (B), (A), (D), (C).
4. (C), (B), (D), (A).

Lymphoid organs’ positions matter for surgical approaches and imaging. This MCQ tests anterior-posterior anatomical sequence of key immune structures—essential for medical entrance exams.

Correct Answer: Option 3 – (B), (A), (D), (C)

Sequence: Adenoids → Thymus → Spleen → Peyer’s patches

Anatomical Locations Table

Organ Position Anatomical Landmark
Adenoids (B) Most anterior Nasopharynx roof (behind nose) 
Thymus (A) Upper anterior thorax Mediastinum (behind sternum, anterior to heart)
Spleen (D) Left upper quadrant LUQ abdomen (posterior to stomach, under diaphragm) 
Peyer’s patches (C) Most posterior Ileum (terminal small intestine, deep pelvis) 

Why This Sequence Works

  1. Adenoids: Most anterior lymphoid tissue in nasopharynx

  2. Thymus: Next in superior mediastinum

  3. Spleen: Left hypochondrium (posterior to anterior abdominal wall)

  4. Peyer’s patches: Deepest in pelvic small bowel loops

Why Other Options Fail

Option 1: Thymus-Adenoids-Peyer’s-Spleen

Wrong. Thymus behind sternum; adenoids more anterior in nasopharynx.

Option 2: Adenoids-Spleen-Thymus-Peyer’s

Wrong. Spleen not anterior to thymus—thymus superior mediastinum precedes abdominal spleen.

Option 4: Peyer’s-Adenoids-Spleen-Thymus

Wrong. Peyer’s patches deepest (ileum); can’t precede head/neck structures.

Clinical Correlations for Medical Students

  • Surgical access: Adenoidectomy (transoral) → thymectomy (mediastinoscopy) → splenectomy (left subcostal) → ileal resection (laparotomy)

  • Imaging: Adenoids (nasal endoscopy) → thymus (CT chest) → spleen (USG abdomen) → Peyer’s (enteroscopy)

  • Embryology link: All derive from endoderm/mesoderm in sequence from cranial to caudal.

MnemonicAnterior Thymus Spleen Posterior (ATSP) with Adenoids first.

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