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A&P.tri-cOH.chap4

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What are Tissues?   Tissues are a collection of similar cells and the substances surrounding them  
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Tissue level of organization   LIving things are highly organized; tissues perform essential functions  
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What is the extracellular matrix?   In classifying tissue types, the composition of the non-cellular substances surrounding the cells is part of the overall function of the tissue...Ex. epithelium tissue-little extracelluar material between cells, a free surface, a basement membrane attachi  
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Tissue types (4) - PRIMARY   1.epithelial tissue, 2. connective tissue 3. muscle tissue 4. nervous tissue  
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How are epithelial & connective tissues classified?   by structure (including cell shapes) relationships of cell to one another & material making up extracellular matrix  
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How are muscle & nervous tissue classified?   by functional & structural characteristics  
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Histology   microscopic study of tissues Gr. "histos" = "web" meaning tissue  
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biopsy   process of removing tissue samples from patients surgically or with a needle for diagnostic purposes  
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Embryonic stem cells   13-14 days after fertilzation, cells form elongated disk consisting of two layers called ectoderm & endoderm; then form mesoderm. "Germ Layers" form all adult structures  
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Endoderm (inner)   forms lining of digestive tract & its derivatives  
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Mesoderm (Middle)   forms muscle, bone & blood vessels  
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Ectoderm (outer)   skin, and also neuro-ectoderm  
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Neuro-ectoderm   nervous system  
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Characteristics of epithelia (7)   PROTECTIVE?? 1. mostly cells 2.covers surfaces of body & forms glands 3. have sides (free/apical; lateral & basal) 4. bound together (tight junctions & desmosomes) 5. Avascular - no blood vessels 6. mitosis-reproduce & replace themselves  
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Epithelialial Tissue - functions   1. Protects underlying structures 2. Acts as a barrier 3. permist passage of substances 4. secretes substances 5. absorbs substances  
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Epithelial cells   epithelium consists almost entirely of cells, with very littel extracellular matrix between them  
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Epithelium covers surfaces of body   Body surfaces include: outside surface, lining of digestive & respiratory tracts, the heart & blood vessels, & linings of body cavities  
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3. Epitheliaum have cell surface shapes   1. Free or APICAL surface ("apex" or top of cell) 2. lateral surface (on the side) -attached to other cells 3. basal surface-usually attached to basement membrane  
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Basement membrane   Specialized type of extracellular material-like adhesive on Scotch tape. Helps attach-plays role in supporting & guding cell migration during tissue repair  
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Do all epithelial cells have basement membrane?   No, some do not (but most do) Ex. lyphatic capillaries & liver sinusoids  
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Epithelial cells are bound together   Specialized cell contacts - tight junctions & desmosomes  
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Desmo   Desmo Gr. "band" - combining form meaning fibrous connections; ligament  
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Desmosome   Think of a "spot weld" to keep cells together - Site of adhesion between two epithelial cells;consists of dense attachment plaque separated by a thin layer of extracellular material Gr. Desmo + some "attachment body"  
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Do epithelial cells have blood vessels?   No, they are AVASCULAR - gases & nutrients in blood reach epithelium by diffusing across basement membrane  
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Do epithelial cells reproduce?   Yes, they are constantly replaced  
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Functions - epithelial - protecthing underlying structures   Ex. skin & epithelium of oral cavity, which protect underlying structures from abrasion  
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Functions-epithelial - Acting as barrier   Prevents movement of substances through the epithelial layer Ex. skin prevents water loss - also protect against toxic bacteria  
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Functions - epithelial - Permitting passage of substances   Allows movement Ex. Nephrons in Kidney - also lungs - oxygen & carbon dioxide are exchanged between the air & blood by diffusion through the epithelium in the lungs  
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functions-epithelial - secreting substances   Ex. mucous glands, sweat glands, & enzyme-secreting portions of pancreas  
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functions-epithelial - absorbing substances   cell membranes of certain epithelial tissues contain carrier molecules that regulate absorption Ex. lining of small intestine  
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Classification of epithelium by number of layers (3)   1.) Simple -single layer of cells 2. Stratified - more than one layer of cells 3. pseydostratified columnar - "false" layers  
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simple epithelium   single layer of cells; each cell extends from basement membrane to free surface Ex. lining of blood vessels  
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stratified epithelim   Consists of more than one layer of cells, but only the basal layer of cells attaches deepest layer to basement membrane ex.sweat glands, ovarian follicular cells  
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Pseudostratified epithelium   One layer of cells, with all cells attached to the basement membrane-appears to be two or more-some cells are tall and extend to the free surface, others are shorter & do not extend to the free surface- contain GOBLET CELLS & secrete mucous - Ex. nasal ca  
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Classification of epithelium by shape (3)   1. Squamous 2. cuboidal 3. columnar  
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Squamous epithelial cells   Squamous L. scales or scaly - cells are flat or scalelike Ex. lining of blood vessels, loop of Henle in kidneys, inner surface of eardrum  
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Columnar   tall & thin - similar to column cells are taller than they are wide ex. stomach, intestines, bile ducts  
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Cuboidal   Cube-shaped; about as wide as they are tall Ex. kidney tubules  
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Functional - simple   simple=diffusion - allows diffusion of gases, filtration of blood, secretion & absorption  
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Functional - stratified - can be keratinized or nonkeritinized   Stratified = protection - particularly against abrasion Ex. keratinized - skin or nonkeratinized - mouth, throat, esophagus  
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functional - squamous   diffusion - filtration  
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functional - cuboidal   secretion or absorption - "goblet" cells that produce & secrete mucous  
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Cell surface modifications - Microvilli   Apical surface has special functions - ex. microvilli (brush border) Ex. lining of small intestine  
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Cell surfaces (4)   Smooth - contain microvilli - be ciliated or be folded  
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Cilia - free surface   Cilia can move materials across surface of cells Ex. simple ciliated cuboidla, simple ciliated columnar & pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelies are in the respiratory tract when cilia move mucus that contains dust, etc. out of the respiratory pass  
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Transitional epithelium - specialized purpsoe   Has rigid & very flexible regions--allows it to expand Ex. urinary bladder  
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Cell connections (3)   1. Form permeability barrier 2. bind cells together 3. provide mechanism for intercellular communication  
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Cell connections - where are they located?   On lateral (side) and basal (basement) membranes  
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hemidesmosomes (1/2 band bodies)   attach epithelial cells to the basement membrane  
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tight junctions   hold cells together & form a permeability barrier; include zona adherens & zona occludens  
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Zona adherens   located between plasma membranes of adjacent cells & acts like weak glue to hold together  
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zona occludens   forms a permeability barrier - located in stomach & urinary bladder - think of zipper-nothing gets through  
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Zona pl. zonae   L. "girdle"  
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Occlude   to close, plug, obstruct or bring together L. oc-cludo "to shut up"  
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Gap junction   Think "junction box" found in cardiac & smooth muscle tissues - has protein channels that allow ions to pass from one cell to next; thought to coordinate contraction of cardiac & smooth muscle cells  
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Glands   secretory organs; many are composed primarily of epithelium  
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Gap junction   Think "junction box" found in cardiac & smooth muscle tissues - has protein channels that allow ions to pass from one cell to next; thought to coordinate contraction of cardiac & smooth muscle cells  
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Glands   secretory organs; many are composed primarily of epithelium  
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Glands (2)   Exocrine - have ducts - Endocrine - do not have ducts  
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Crinogenic   Causing secretion; stimulating a glad to increased function Gr. "krino" to separate + gen "to produce"  
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Exocrine glands   Glands with ducts - Ex. sweat glands  
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Endocrine glands   Glands without ducts Ex. adrenal glands  
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Structure of glands - two types   endocrine (no ducts) - exocrine (ducts)  
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What types of glands?   Unicellular (ex. goblet cells in large & small intestines) or multicellular Ex. mammary glands  
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Connective tissue - what is the main characteristic of connective tissue?   Contains abundant extracellular matrix  
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What is the most abundant kind of tissue in the body?   Connective tissue  
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Connective tissue functions/characteristics (7)   1. Enclose organs as capsule & separate layers 2. Connect tissues to one another 3. support and movement 4. Storage 5. Cushion and insulate 6. transport & 7. protect  
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Connective tissue - enclosing & separating   sheets form capsules around organs-ex. liver & kidneys - form layers to separate-ex. muscles, arteries & nerves are separate  
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connective tissue - connecting tissues to one another   Ex. tendons act like cables, attaching muscles to bones  
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connective tissue-supporting & moving   Bones provide rigid support; cartilage provides structure to nose; joints allow movement  
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storing   adipose tissue (fat)  
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cushioning and insulating   adipose tissue cusions and protects - stores heat Ex. heart  
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transporting   blood transports throughout body - blood is connective tissue  
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protecting   Blood & cells of immune system protect against toxins, bones protect against injury Ex. brain/skull  
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Structure of glands - two types   endocrine (no ducts) - exocrine (ducts)  
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What types of glands?   Unicellular (ex. goblet cells in large & small intestines) or multicellular Ex. mammary glands  
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Gap junction   Think "junction box" found in cardiac & smooth muscle tissues - has protein channels that allow ions to pass from one cell to next; thought to coordinate contraction of cardiac & smooth muscle cells  
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Connective tissue - what is the main characteristic of connective tissue?   Contains abundant extracellular matrix  
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Glands   secretory organs; many are composed primarily of epithelium  
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What is the most abundant kind of tissue in the body?   Connective tissue  
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Glands (2)   Exocrine - have ducts - Endocrine - do not have ducts  
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Connective tissue functions/characteristics (7)   1. Enclose organs as capsule & separate layers 2. Connect tissues to one another 3. support and movement 4. Storage 5. Cushion and insulate 6. transport & 7. protect  
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Crinogenic   Causing secretion; stimulating a glad to increased function Gr. "krino" to separate + gen "to produce"  
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Connective tissue - enclosing & separating   sheets form capsules around organs-ex. liver & kidneys - form layers to separate-ex. muscles, arteries & nerves are separate  
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Exocrine glands   Glands with ducts - Ex. sweat glands  
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Endocrine glands   Glands without ducts Ex. adrenal glands  
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storing   adipose tissue (fat)  
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Structure of glands - two types   endocrine (no ducts) - exocrine (ducts)  
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cushioning and insulating   adipose tissue cusions and protects - stores heat Ex. heart  
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What types of glands?   Unicellular (ex. goblet cells in large & small intestines) or multicellular Ex. mammary glands  
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Connective tissue - what is the main characteristic of connective tissue?   Contains abundant extracellular matrix  
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What is the most abundant kind of tissue in the body?   Connective tissue  
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Connective tissue functions/characteristics (7)   1. Enclose organs as capsule & separate layers 2. Connect tissues to one another 3. support and movement 4. Storage 5. Cushion and insulate 6. transport & 7. protect  
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Connective tissue - enclosing & separating   sheets form capsules around organs-ex. liver & kidneys - form layers to separate-ex. muscles, arteries & nerves are separate  
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connective tissue - connecting tissues to one another   Ex. tendons act like cables, attaching muscles to bones  
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connective tissue-supporting & moving   Bones provide rigid support; cartilage provides structure to nose; joints allow movement  
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storing   adipose tissue (fat)  
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cushioning and insulating   adipose tissue cusions and protects - stores heat Ex. heart  
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transporting   blood transports throughout body - blood is connective tissue  
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protecting   Blood & cells of immune system protect against toxins, bones protect against injury Ex. brain/skull  
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composition of connective tissue   cells & protein fibers - collagen & reticular elastic  
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Connective tissue has 3 components   Protein fibers - ground substance and fluid  
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Collagen fibers   Collagen (most commonn protein in body) - is like rope-15 different kinds -  
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reticular fibers   very fine collagen fibers; fill spaces between tissues & organs  
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ground substance   "shapeless" background of matrix; contains hyaluronic acid & proteoglycans  
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hyaluronic acid   "glassy appearance" gr. hyalos = glass. Lubricant; gives slippery quality to fluids Ex. connective tissue; is major component for vitreous humor of the eye  
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proteoglycans   trap water within connect tissue; bond with hyaluronic acid  
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Embryonic connective tissue   Mesenchyme (Gr. mes plus enkyma "infusion" - primordial connective tissue formed in embryo in third & fourth weeks of development; all adult connective types form from it  
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Mesenchyme forms primarily from   mesoderm  
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Wharton's jelly or mucous connective tissue   Only in umbilical cord-originate in egg & sperm;formed from remnants of egg & sperm  
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Types of connective tissue (7)   1. Areolor (loose) 2. Dense 3. adipose 4. Bone/cartilage 5. blood 6. Muscle 7. nervous  
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Areolar or Loose connective tissue   "packing" tissue-loose protein fibers form a lacy network - fluid-filled spaces.  
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Arealor or loose connective tissue contains   collagen, reticular and elastic fibers. Found in skin--attaches loosely  
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Dense connective tissue (2)   Regular Ex. tendons & irregular Ex. dermis of skin  
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Dense connective - Regular (4)   1. Regular arrangement-fibers predominantly in same direction 2. fibers form thick bundles 3. collagenous 4. elastic properties (in some) Ex tendons-strong cable-like structures  
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Dense regular elastic connective tissue   Ex. vocal folds - have elastic ligaments; yellow color, can stretch & return  
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Dense irregular connective tissue   Fibers are not all in one direction - can be random or adjacent layers can be at right angles to another layer Ex. muscles, cartilage  
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adipose tissue (two types)   yellow (found in adults) and brown (more prevalent in babies) - found only in armpits, near kidneys  
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Types of bone (2)   Compact - "hard" bone Ex. long bones/shafts- Cancellous "spongy" bone Ex. interior of bones of the skull  
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Cartilage   composed of cartilage cells or CHONDROCYTES - located in spaces call LACUNAE- within an extensive & rigid matrix. Next to bone, cartilage is firmest structure in body  
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Chondro- chondrio   Combining fomr G. Condrion "groats" (coarsely ground grain or grits, gristle  
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lacuna - lacunae (pl.)   Latin- Lake - a small space, cavity or depression - a gap or defect -  
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Cartilage - 3 types   1. Hyaline Ex. trachea 2. fibrocartilage Ex. knee 3. Elastic Ex. external ears  
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Hyaline cartilage   Hyalos "glass" cartilage with frosted-glass appearance, interstitial substance containing fine collagen fibers - In embryo, forms skeleton before it is replaced by bone. Also in trachea and bronchi  
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Fibrocartilage   More collagen fibers; much thicker bundles than hyaline cartilage; slightly compressible & very tough-knees, the jaw & between vertebrae  
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elastic cartilage   Has elastic fibers and collagen - found in external ears  
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Bone   Hard connective tissue composed of living cells - osteocytes in lacunae - mineralized matrix  
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Matrix of bone   gives strength & rigidity- Has organic & inorganic portion  
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Organic bone matrix   Consists of protein fibers (primarily collagen) and other organic molecules  
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Inorganic bone matrix   Specialized crystals call hydroxyapatite (contain calcium & phosphate)  
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Bone cells are called   osteocytes - located in holes in matric, called LACUNAE  
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Blood matrix   Plasma - contains liquid and LACKS FIBERS and "formed elements"  
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What are the "formed elements" in blood   red cells, white cells & platelets  
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Muscle tissue (3)   1. skeletal 2. cardiac 3. smooth  
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Skeletal muscle (3)   attached to bone - striated fibers - voluntary control  
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Cardiac muscle   Striated w/dark & light bands - branched - have intercalated disks, which contain gap junctions  
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smooth muscle   NOT STRIATED - movements in digestive, urinary & reproductive system - INvoluntary control  
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Nervous Tissue   Found in brain, spinal cord & nerves - conducts electrical signals  
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Action potentials in nerve cells   Electric signals in nerve cells  
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Neurons   Nerve cells - transport electrical systems through the body  
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Neurons are composed of (3)   Cell body (nucleus) Axon - conduct action potentials AWAY from the cell body - DENDRITES - receive action potentials  
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AXON - Long or short?   AXON is LONG - covered in myelin sheeth - contain neuroglia  
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Dendrite - what shapre?   much shorter than axons-taper to a fine tip  
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Neuroglia   "nerve glue" support cells of brain, spinal cord & nerves-nourish, protect & insulate neurons  
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Membranes (3)   1. Mucous Ex. digestive lining 2. Serous - line cavities, pleural 3. Synovial - lines freely movable joints Ex. around knee  
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Serous membrane   covers organs & lines cavities - double-walled sacs (fist in balloon) - serous membranes have parietal & visceral  
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Mucous membranes   Consists of epithelial cells, goblet cells & connective tissue - secretes mucous - found in respiratory, digestive & reproductive systems  
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Synovial membrane   Lines freely movable joints - fluid-filled with hyaluronic acid  
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