histology 1.epithelial tissues 2.connective tissues 3.muscle tissues 4.nervous tissues

27
Histology 1. Epithelial tissues 2. Connective tissues 3. Muscle tissues 4. Nervous tissues

Upload: oswald-augustine-ellis

Post on 02-Jan-2016

248 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Histology

1. Epithelial tissues

2. Connective tissues

3. Muscle tissues

4. Nervous tissues

Page 2: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues
Page 3: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Cuboidal Epithelium

• Equal in height and width

• Secretory portions of glands or in tubules of kidney and tissue covering the ovary

Page 4: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Squamous Epithelium

• Flat irregular outline• Scalelike• Thin• Lining blood vessels,

pericardium, pleurae, skin

Page 5: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Columnar Epithelium

• Packed closely together

• Protective covering for the inner surface of an organ

• Lining of the digestive tract

• Secretions

Page 6: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Stratified Columnar Epithelium

• This is pseudostratified

• True stratified composed of many layers

• Notice these columnar cells are ciliated

• Line trachea

Page 7: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Connective Tissue

• Bone• Cartilage• Dense fibrous connective

tissue• Loose fibrous connective

tissue• Liquid connective tissue

Page 8: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Bone

• Characterized by osteocytes in compact bone, with Haversian canals, concentric lacunae

• Found in skeleton

• Framework for movement, support, and protection

• Stores minerals; makes blood

Page 9: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Bone

• Dark stained areas lacunae

• Lumen are Haverian canals

Page 10: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Cartilage

• Chondrocytes in lacunae• Mostly intracellular• Found in pinna, ends of long bones, larynx,

nose, between vertebrae, between rib and breastbone, trachae

• Function is to cushion, lend rigidity to boneless structures, slippery surface for some joints

Page 11: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Types of Cartilage

Hyaline Cartilage Elastic Cartilage

Fibrous Cartilage Growth Plate

Page 12: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Dense Fibrous Connective Tissue

• Regularly arranged

• Collagen and fibroblasts

• Found in tendons and ligaments

• Joins muscles to bones or bone to bone; provides protection and carries blood supply

Page 13: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Dense Fibrous Connective Tissue

• Tendon • Irregular Dense CT

Page 14: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Loose Fibrous Connective Tissue

• Elastic: elastin, capsules of organs, holds organ together, lungs and vessels

• Areolar: loose weave, facial area beneath skin, collagen, support, reservoir fluids and salts

• Reticular: surrounds individual cells, acts as filler tissue and support; muscle fibers, liver, lymph nodes, and spleen

• Adipose: around organs, beneath skin, breast, cushions, insulates, and stores fat

Page 15: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Loose Fibrous Connective Tissue

Elastic Mucosal (Areolar)

Reticular Adipose

Page 16: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Liquid Connective Tissue

• Blood: found in heart and vessels; functions in respiration, nutrition, excretion, body temperature, disease protection

• Lymph: found in tissue spaces between cells, cerebrospinal fluid; functions in bathing cells, nutrition, and protection from disease

Page 17: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Liquid Connective Tissue

B: Red Blood Cell nucleated

A & C: Leucocytes

Lymphocytes along margin

Page 18: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Muscle Tissues

• Skeletal

• Smooth

• Cardiac

Page 19: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Skeletal Muscle

• Attached to skeleton• Voluntary control• Fibers are elongate, cylindrical, with blunt ends• Striated• Multiple Nuclei per fiber• Nuclei are peripheral• Has most rapid contraction speed• Has least duration of contraction length

Page 20: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Smooth Muscle

• Located in walls in stomach, arteries, and veins• Involuntary control• Fibers are elongate, spindle, with pointed ends• No striations• One nuclei per fiber• Nucleus is centrally located• Has slowest contraction speed• Has greatest duration of contraction

Page 21: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Cardiac Muscle

• Located in walls of heart• Involuntary control• Fibers are elongate, cylindrical, fibers branch and

fuse• Has striations• One-two nuclei per fiber• Nuclei are located centrally• Has intermediate speed of contraction• Has intermediate duration of contraction

Page 22: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Muscle Tissues

Skeletal Skeletal with striations

Smooth Cardiac

Page 23: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Nervous Tissue

• Neurons

• Glial cells

• Schwann cells

Page 24: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Neurons

• 3 parts: soma, dendrites, and axon• Dendrites receive inputs • Axons conducts impulses away from the

cell body toward another neuron, muscle, or gland

• 3 types of neurons: motor (muscles), sensory (sense organs), and associative (relay from sensory to motor neurons)

Page 25: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Glial Cells

• Many different types, including astrocytes

• Supporting cells for neurons

• Smaller and more numerous than neurons

• Give rise to most tumors in CNS

Histology

1. Epithelial tissues

2. Connective tissues

3. Muscle tissues

4. Nervous tissues

Page 26: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Schwann Cells

• May be categorized with glial cells

• Supporting cells found outside CNS form sheaths

• Nearly all neurons 2 micrometers or greater in diameter are myelinated-covered with Schwann cells

Page 27: Histology 1.Epithelial tissues 2.Connective tissues 3.Muscle tissues 4.Nervous tissues

Nervous Tissue

Myelinated nerve cells Unmyelinated nerve cells

Astrocytes – Glial cells