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Histology Tissue Epithelial Tissue Apical surface Basal surface Basement membrane Goblet Cell Gland Secretion Hormone. Connective Tissue Extracellular matrix Ground substance Muscle Tissue Striations Intercalated Disks Nervous Tissue Neuron.
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Histology Tissue Epithelial Tissue Apical surface Basal surface Basement membrane Goblet Cell Gland Secretion Hormone Connective Tissue Extracellular matrix Ground substance Muscle Tissue Striations Intercalated Disks Nervous Tissue Neuron Chap. 3 Tissue Vocabulary
Tissue: groups of cells that are similar in structure and perform a common or related function • Four primary tissue types: epithelial, connective, muscle, nervous • Histology: the study of tissues
Tissues Foldable • FOUR TYPES OF TISSUES: Epithelial, Connective, Muscle, Nerve • SUMMARIZE THE FUNCTIONS/ROLE OF EACH • INCLUDE ANY SUBTYPES & LOCATIONS IN THE BODY • ORIGINAL PICTURES, WORDS, DIAGRAMS • COLORFUL • DESIGNED TO INSTRUCT ANATOMY STUDENTS • 8.5 x 11 inch white, unlined paper; front & back if needed; one page for each tissue type.
CONNECTIVE TISSUE • Use 2 separate sides of paper to include all of these • embryonic tissue: mesenchyme • connective tissue proper • loose • areolar, adipose, reticular – show examples • dense (fibrous) • regular, irregular – give an example of each of these • cartilage • hyaline, elastic, fibrocartilage— show examples • bone • blood
NERVOUS TISSUE MUSCLE TISSUE Use the book to find pictures and locations of these
FUNCTIONS OF EPITHELIUM • PROTECTION • ABSORPTION • FILTRATION • EXCRETION • SECRETION
SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS • Cells fit closely together to form continuous sheets. • Neighboring cells are bound by desmosomes and tight junctions. • Always have one free surface, “Apical Surface” • Exposed surface is either slick and smooth or ciliated. • Lower surface of epithelium rests on top of a Basement Membrane. • Avascular = No blood supply • Regenerate easily if well nourished
Epithelial Tissue: • Simple—composed of one cell layer • squamous • cuboidal • columnar • psuedostratified columnar • Stratified—two or more cell layers • squamous • columnar • transitional
simple cuboidal simple squamous Psuedostratified Columnar simple Ciliated Columnar
Stratified Squamous Stratified Cuboidal Transitional
GLANDULAR EPITHELIA • Gland—one or more cells that make and secrete (export) a product • Secretion—an aqueous fluid that usually contains proteins; some are lipids or steroid-rich
Endocrine glands—internal secretion • ductless, secrete hormones: first into extracellular space then enter blood or lymphatic fluid • structurally diverse • examples: pituitary, thyroid, adrenal, gonads Exocrine glands—external and internal secretion • more numerous, bound to ducts and secretions empty into ducts. • examples: sweat, mucous (goblet cells), liver, pancreas, oil, salivary
simple cuboidal simple columnar psuedostratified columnar simple squamous
simple squamous stratified squamous simple cuboidal stratified cuboidal transitional epithelium psuedostratified columnar simple columnar
CONNECTIVE TISSUE • Most abundant & widely distributed tissue
CONNECTIVE TISSUE FUNCTIONS • BINDING & SUPPORT • PROTECTION • INSULATION • TRANSPORTATION
Common Characteristics of Connective Tissue • Arise from the mesenchyme (an embryonic tissue) • Variations in blood supply: cartilage is avascular (no blood), Tendons and Ligaments (poor amounts of blood)—other types have rich supply of blood • Extracellular matrix: most connective tissue is nonliving and made up of different types of cells
structural elements of connective tissue • ground substance: unstructured materials between cells; holds large amounts of fluid • interstitial fluid, cell adhesion proteins, proteoglycans • provides a medium for diffusion of nutrients between capillaries & connective tissue cells • fibers • collagen, elastic, reticular fibers • cells (-blast: forming cells –cyte: mature cells) • fibroblast, chondroblast, osteoblast, hematopoietic stem cell • other cell types (macrophage, mast)
Connective Tissue Types • Embryonic Tissue: mesenchyme • Loose Connective Tissue • areolar, adipose, reticular • Dense (fibrous) Connective Tissue • regular, irregular • Cartilage • hyaline, elastic, fibrocartilage • Bone • Blood
Locations • under epithelia • lamina propria of mucous membranes • around organs • surround capillaries Loose connective Tissue: Areolar • Functions • cushions organs • inflammation • macrophage site • hold, convey tissue fluid
Dense Connective Tissue : Regular • Locations • tendons • most ligaments • aponeuroses • Functions • muscles to bone • bone to bone • withstands tensile stress
cartilage: hyaline • Locations • end of long bones • ribs • nose • trachea, larynx • Functions • supports, reinforces • resists compression • resilient cushioning
Nervous Tissue • neurons • supporting cells Muscle Tissue • skeletal • smooth • cardiac
Muscle Tissue Skeletal Muscle: • Has obvious Striations
Muscle Tissue Cardiac Muscle • Has Intercalated Discs
Muscle Tissue Smooth Muscle • Cells are pointy on each end