Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 6

Epithelial Tissue

Simple Squamous Epithelium


Simple Cuboidal Epithelium
Simple Columnar Epithelium
Stratified Squamous Epithelium
Pseudostratified Columnar Epithelium

Connective Tissue

Connective Tissue Proper


Loose/Areolar Connective Tissue
Collagen Fiber
Elastic Fiber
Fibroblasts
Fibrocytes
Mast cells
Ground substance

Dense Irregular Connective Tissue


Collagen Fiber
Fibrocytes
Ground substance

Dense Regular Connective Tissue


Collagen Fiber
Fibrocytes

Elastic connective tissue


Elastic Fiber
Fibrocytes

Reticular Connective tissue


Reticular Fiber- mesh-like
Reticulocytes

Adipose Tissue
Adipocytes
Ground substance

Mesenchymal Tissue
Mesenchymal cells
Ground substance
Reticular fiber

Supporting connective tissue

Hyaline Cartilage
Chondrocytes
Lacunae
Ground substance
ECM
Perichondrium-Dense connective tissue
Chondroblasts
Fibroblasts

Elastic cartilage
Chondrocytes in Lacunae
Elastic cartilage
Ground substance
Perichondrium-Dense connective tissue
Chondroblasts
Fibroblasts

Fibrocartilage
Chondrocytes in Lacunae
Collagen Fiber

Osseous Tissue
Compact bone
Osteocytes
Haversian system
Haversian Canal
Volkmann’s canal
Concentric Lamellae
Cement line
Osteocytes in Lacunae
Canaliculi
Interstitial lamellae
Outer circumferential lamellae
Sharpey fibers
Inner circumferential lamellae
Spongy Bone

Blood

Muscle Tissue.
Skeletal muscle tissue
Skeletal muscle fiber
Coverings:
Perimysium
Endomysium
Epimysium

Sarcolemma
Sarcoplasm
Striations

Fascicle-Bundle of muscle fibers

Sarcolemma
Sarcoplasm

Cardiac muscle tissue


Nucleus
Sarcolemma
Sarcoplasm
Intercalated disc
Smooth muscle
Nucleus
Sarcolemma
Sarcoplasm

Nervous Tissue
Cell body
Nucleus
Nissl Bodies
Axon hillock
Dendrites
Axon

Spinal Cord
Pia matter
Gray matter
White matter
Central canal
Ependymal cells
Anterior median fissure
Posterior (Dorsal) Horn
Anterior (Ventral) Horn
Ventral funiculus
Lateral funiculus
Dorsal Funiculus

Cerebellum
Pia mater
Folium
Gray matter
Granular layer
Molecular layer
Purkinje cells
White matter

Nerve cells
Cell body
Nucleus
Nissl Bodies
Axon hillock
Dendrites
Axon

Integumentary System

Layer:

Epidermis

Types
Thin Skin
Sublayer:
Stratum corneum
Stratum granulosum
Stratum spinosum
Stratum basale

Thick Skin
Sublayer:
Stratum corneum
Stratum lucidum
Stratum granulosum
Stratum spinosum
Stratum basale

Dermis

Sub-layer:

Papillary layer- loose connective tissue


The papillary layer is the top layer of your dermis. It’s much thinner than the reticular dermis. It
consists of collagen fibers, fibroblast cells, fat cells, blood vessels (capillary loops), nerve fibers,
touch receptors (Meissner corpuscles) and cells that fight bacteria (phagocytes). The papillary
dermis extends to the basement layer of the epidermis layer. They form a strong bond that
connects like interlocking fingers.

Reticular layer--Dense irregular connective tissue

The reticular layer is the bottom layer of your dermis. It’s thick, and it contains blood vessels,
glands, hair follicles, lymphatics, nerves and fat cells. A net-like structure of elastin fibers and
collagen fibers surrounds the reticular dermis. These fibers support your skin’s overall structure,
as well as allow it to move and stretch

Sweat glands
Hair follicles
Sebaceous gland
Arrector pili muscle

You might also like