Summary

This document provides descriptions and classifications of various animal tissues, including epithelial, connective, nervous, and muscle tissue. It outlines the key characteristics, functions, and types of each tissue system. The information is presented in a tabular and diagrammatic format.

Full Transcript

SIMPLE SQUAMOUS SIMPLE CUBOIDAL SIMPLE COLUMNAR EPITHELIAL EPITHELIAL...

SIMPLE SQUAMOUS SIMPLE CUBOIDAL SIMPLE COLUMNAR EPITHELIAL EPITHELIAL EPITHELIAL - Scale like; cheek - Box like; Kidney - Column like; SIMPLE EPITHLIAL cells, lungs, blood Tubules Digestives, -Single Layer vessels Intestine, Basal, -ASP Nucleus PSEUDOSTRATIFIED COVERING AND LINING COLUMNAR Respiratory Tract – EPITHELIAL Trachea - Protect - Surface epithelium - Fake Layer – Cilia- movement - Irregular Shape Gablet Cells - Mucus STRATIFIED TRANSITIONAL STRATIFIED CUBOIDAL STRATIFIED EPITHELIAL EPITHELIUM EPITHELIAL COLUMNAR STRATIFIED - Change in EPITHELIAL SQUAMOUS - Protective Shape – EPITHELIAL Tissue - Secretion and Apical EPITHELIAL - Skin - Sweat Gland, Protection; Cells mammary Male Urethra - Urinary TISSUE Gland, Bladder Salivary ENDOCRINE GLAND - Ductless Glandular Epithelium Ex. Thyroid, Sweat, - Secretion of Pituitary, etc. substances - Hormones EXCOCRINE GLAND - Duct Ex. Sweat, milk, saliva LOOSE ADIPOSE RETICULAR CONNECTIVE -Fats storage AREOLAR - Mesh like TISSUE cell -Web-like -Insulation Fashion - Lymphatic - Shocks -Yellowish tissue absorption and Binding Tissue CONNECTIVE TISSUE PROPER - Fibroblast DENSE DENSE REGULAR CONNECTIVE CONNECTIVE TISSUE DENSE IRREGULAR CONNECTIVE TISSUE TISSUE - Parallel - Tensile Strength - Random direction - More collagen Ex. Ligaments – Bonse to Bone Ex. Dermis fibers. Tendons – Bone to muscle CONNECTIVE - - greater resistance to TISSUE stretch COLLAGEN - High tensile strength CONNECTIVE TISSUE FIBERS AND GROUND SUBTANCES ELASTIC FIBER - Elastic - Proteoglycans and Cell Adhesion RETICULAR FIBER – Soft organs Ex. Liver and Spleen Hyaline - embryonic Fibro Cartilage – CARTILAGE Skeleton, ribs Elastic – external ear Knee, jaw joints, and cartilage of nose, (auride), epiglottis intervertebral disc - Chondrocytes trachea, larynx SPECIALIZED BONE CONNECTIVE TISSUE - Hardest connective Tissue, - Protection, - Osteocytes LIQUID BLOOD - Plasma SOLID - Red Blood Cell - Erythrocytes - White Blood Cell - Leukocytes - Platelets - Thrombocytes Voluntary Tissue - muscle SKELETAL TISSUE - type of muscle that is primarily responsible for voluntary movements in the body. that is under conscious - FOR LOCOMOTION, FACIAL EXPERSSION, AND POSTURE control. MUSSLE CARDIAC TISSUE - muscle found exclusively in the heart. It TISSUE Involuntary Tissue - muscle is responsible for the heart's contractions, which pump blood throughout the body. types that operate without conscious control. SMOOTH TISSUE - type of involuntary muscle found throughout the body. It plays a key role in various automatic processes Dendrites: Axon: Cell Body (Soma): Branch-like A long, slender Axon Terminals: Contains the extensions projection that The endpoints of NERVE CELL - or neuron, is nucleus and that receive transmits electrical the axon that organelles. signals from impulses away from release the basic functional unit of Responsible other the cell body. neurotransmitters the nervous system. Neurons for the to communicate neurons. May be covered by a are specialized cells designed metabolic Increase the myelin sheath, with other neurons NERVOUS to transmit information throughout the body. activities of the neuron. surface area for receiving which insulates the axon and speeds up or target cells (muscles, glands). TISSUE inputs. signal transmission. GLIAL CELL - or neuroglia, Astrocytes: Oligodendrocytes: Schwann Cells: Microglia: Ependymal Cells: are non-neuronal cells in the Structure: Structure: Structure: Structure: Structure: nervous system that provide Star-shaped Cells with Like Small, Ciliated support, nourishment, and cells with fewer oligodendroc mobile cells lining protection for neurons. They numerous projections ytes but cells that the play crucial roles in projections. than found in the act as the ventricles maintaining the overall Functions: astrocytes. peripheral immune of the Provide Functions: nervous cells of the brain and health and function of the structural Form the system CNS. the central nervous system. support, myelin (PNS). Functions: canal of regulate sheath Functions: Respond the spinal blood flow, around axons Also form to injury cord. maintain the in the central myelin or disease, Functions: blood-brain nervous sheaths removing Produce barrier, and system around debris and and assist in the (CNS), which peripheral dead cells circulate repair of insulates axons, aiding through cerebrospi nervous axons and in faster phagocyto nal fluid tissue. speeds up signal sis and (CSF), electrical conduction releasing which signal and inflammat cushions transmission. promoting ory and nerve mediators. protects regeneration. the brain and spinal cord.

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