Title: Tissues
1Tissues
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24 Types of Tissues
- All tissues can be classified into four major
categories based on structure and function - Epithelial Covers and protect body surfaces,
lines body cavities, moves substances in and out
of blood (secretion, excretion absorption),
form glands - Connective support, connection, transport,
protection - Muscle moves the body its parts specialized
for contractility - Nervous provides communication between body
parts and coordinates body functions
3Embryonic Development
- Zygote becomes a blastocyst through mitotic
division - Cells of the blastocyst regroup into primary germ
layers - Endoderm, mesoderm, ectoderm
- Gastrulation
- Histogenesis
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5Epithelial Tissue
- Subdivided into 2 types
- Membranous
- Covers the body some of its parts
- Lines body cavities (pleural, pericardial,
peritoneal), blood vessels, respiratory,
digestive and genitourinary tracts - Glandular
- Form the secretion units of the endocrine
exocrine glands
6Epithelial Tissue
- Functions of epithelial tissues
- Protection
- Ex skin protects body from injury
disease-causing micro-organisms - Sensory
- Epithelial structures that specialize in sensory
functions found in skin, nose, eye, ear - Secretion
- Glandular epithelium secrete hormones, digestive
juices sweat - Absorption
- Ex gut absorbs nutrients exchange of
respiratory gases - Excretion
- Ex kidney tubules concentrate excrete urine
and other waste products
7Epithelial Tissue
- Basement membrane
- Thin, noncellular layer of adhesive
- Connects epithelial tissue and underlying
connective tissue - Avascular
- without vascular
- Epithelial cells do not have blood vessels
- Oxygen nutrients diffuse from capillaries
through connective tissue basement membrane to
epithelial cells
8Classification of Membranous Epithelial Tissue
- Cell Shape
- Squamous flat, plate-like
- Cuboidal cube-shaped larger cytoplasm
- Columnar narrow and cylinder-shaped
- Pseudostratified single-layered all cells touch
the basement membrane but may not extend to the
top of the membrane - Layers of Cells
- Simple single layer
- Stratified cells are layered on top of one
another - Transitional cell shape layers differ
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10- Founds in areas where diffusion or filtration are
necessary - Examples of locations
- Alveoli (air sacs)
- Linings of blood lymphatic vessels
- Surfaces of pleura, pericardium peritoneum
11- Examples of locations
- Glands and their ducts
12- Examples of Locations
- Mucous membranes such as stomach, intestine,
uterus - Goblet cells (produce mucous) microvilli
(increase surface area) are usually found on
these cell types
13- Examples of locations
- Respiratory tract, male urethra
- Goblet cells cilia present
14- Examples of locations
- Skin
- Keratin (tough protein) provides (fig 5-8 not
pictured)
15- Examples of locations
- Areas subject to stress and tension changes
(Urinary bladder)
16Glandular Epithelium
- Specialized for secretory activity
- Unicellular glands
- Single celled
- Ex goblet cells
- Multicellular glands
- Function in clusters, solid cords or specialized
follicles
17Endocrine vs Exocrine
- All glands are classified as endocrine or
exocrine - Exocrine glands
- Discharge/secrete into ducts
- Ex salivary glands
- Endocrine glands
- ductless glands
- Secrete hormones directly into blood or
interstitial fluid - Ex pituitary and thyroid glands
18Structural Classification of Exocrine Glands
- (Table 5-2, p. 133)
- Shape of gland
- Tubular
- Alveolar (sac-like)
- Complexity of gland
- Simple (one duct)
- Compound gt 2 ducts (branched)
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20Functional Classification of Exocrine Glands
- Apocrine
- Collect secretory products at apex (tip)
- Apex of cell pinches off
- Cell repairs itself repeats process
- Ex milk-producing mammary glands
- Holocrine
- Collect secretory product inside the cell
- Rupture to release (self-destructs)
- Ex sebaceous glands (oil glands)
- Merocrine
- Discharge through plasma membrane
- This type applies to most exocrine glands
- Ex salivary glands
21Figure 5-12, p. 132
22Connective Tissue
- Most widespread tissue in the body
- Functions
- Connection
- Support
- Transport
- Protection
- Insulation
23Characteristics of Connective Tissue
- Common origin mesoderm
- Matrix
- Intercellular material
- Few cells, fibers, fluid, ground substance
(material between cells) - Fibers
- Collagenous fibers
- Reticular fibers
- Elastic fibers
24Fibers
- Collagenous fibers
- white fibers
- Made of collagen (fibrous protein)
- Tough, strong
- Reticular fibers
- Delicate
- Reticulin protein
- Support small structures (ex capillaries)
- Elastic fibers
- Extensible elastic
- Elastin protein
- Found in stretchy tissue (ex cartilage of the
external ear)
25Classification of Connective Tissue
- Fibrous
- Loose (areolar)
- Adipose
- Reticular
- dense
- Bone
- Cartilage
- Hyaline
- Fibrocartilage
- elastic
- Blood
Reference Table 5-3, pp. 134-135
26Fibrous Connective Tissue
- Loose connective (areolar) tissue (fig 5-13)
- Stretchable
- most abundant connective tissue in the body
- Connects adjacent structures
- Ex btwn other tissues and organs
- Ex superficial fascia
27Fibrous Connective Tissue
- 2. Adipose tissue (fig 5-14)
- Contains mainly fat cells
- Supportive/protection pads around kidneys other
body structures - Storage deposit for excess food
- Insulating material, conserves body heat
28Fibrous Connective Tissue
- 3. Reticular Tissue (Fig 5-16)
- 3D web of reticular fibers
- Forms the framework of the spleen, lymph nodes
bone marrow - Meshwork filters harmful substances out of the
blood
29Fibrous Connective Tissue
- 4. Dense Fibrous Tissue (fig 5-17, 5-18, 5-19)
- Densely packed fibers
- Regular Dense CT
- Fibers arranged in regular, parallel rows
- Collagen fibers
- Flexible, strong
- Tendons (muscle to bone) ligaments (bone to
bone) - Irregular Dense CT
- Fibers intertwine
- Withstand stress from any direction
- Ex dermis (inner layer of skin) outer capsule
of kidney spleen
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31Bone Tissue
- We will cover this when we cover the skeletal
system - Just know that bone is a type of connective
tissue ?
32Cartilage
- Only 1 cell type chondrocyte
- Located in lacuna
- Avascular receive nutrients via diffusion
- Injuries to cartilage heal slowly due to poor
nutrient delivery
33Cartilage - Types
- Hyaline cartilage
- Most common
- Covers ends of long bones (where joints
articulate) - Found in supporting rings of respiratory tubes
- Fibrocartilage
- Strongest, most durable
- Intervertebral disks
- Menisci in knee joint
- Elastic cartilage
- Fine elastic fibers
- High degree of flexibility
- External ear
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35Blood
- Unusual type of connective tissue
- No ground substance
- Matrix plasma (55)
- Formed elements blood cells (45)
- Erythrocytes RBCs
- Leukocytes WBCs
- Thrombocytes platelets
- Transport function
- Respiratory gases, nutrients, waste products
36Muscle Tissue
- 3 types
- Skeletal muscle tissue
- Smooth muscle tissue
- Cardiac muscle tissue
37Skeletal Muscle Tissue
- Muscles (attached to bone)
- striated voluntary muscle
- Structure striations, multi-nucleated, long,
tread-like cells, bundles of microfilaments
38Smooth Muscle Tissue
- Aka visceral muscle tissue
- Lines walls of hollow internal organs (viscera)
- Stomach, intestines, blood vessels
- non-striated involuntary muscle
- Structure long, narrow cells, non-striated
39Smooth Muscle Tissue
40Cardiac Muscle Tissue
- Walls of the heart
- striated involuntary muscle
- Structure striations, dark band (intercalated
disks (where plasma membranes meet up)
41Nervous Tissue
- Rapidly integrates activities of various parts of
the body - Rapid communication is made possible b/c of the
excitability conductivity characteristics of
the nervous tissue
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42Nervous System
- 3 Parts
- Brain
- Spinal cord
- Nerves
- Nervous Tissue
- Common origin ectoderm
- Two cell types
- Neurons (nerve cell)
- Neuroglia (supporting cells)
43Anatomy of Neurons
- Cell body soma
- Cell processes
- Axon ? transmits nerve impulses away from cell
body - Dendrites ? carry signals towards axon
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44Tissue Repair
- After mechanical damage or tissue injury
- Phagocytic cells remove dead or injured cells
- Regeneration growth of functional new tissue
(via mitotic division) - Repair capacity based on tissue type
45Epithelial Connective Tissue Repair
- Greatest capacity to regenerate
- Epithelial Tissue
- Cut/injury ? cell division ? tissue regeneration
- Connective Tissue
- Cut/injury ? activation of cells that make
collagen fibers ? injury site filled w/ dense
fibrous CT - Small injury dense fibrous CT replaced by
normal tissue - Deep/large injury dense fibrous CT forms scar
46Muscle Tissue Repair
- Limited repair capacity
- Damaged muscle tissue replaced with fibrous CT
- Results in loss of some or all ability to
function normally
47Nervous Tissue Repair
- Limited ability to regenerate
- Some neurons outside the brain and spinal cord
can regenerate (slow process) - Majority of the time brain spinal injuries
always result in permanent damage
48Body Membranes
- Membrane thin, sheet-like structure
- Two types
- Epithelial membranes
- Composed of epithelial tissue and underlying
connective tissue - Connective Tissues membranes
- Composed entirely of connective tissue
49Epithelial Membranes
- Cutaneous membrane
- Cover body surfaces exposed to external
environment (skin) - Serous membrane
- Single membrane covering two different surfaces
- Parietal membrane lines walls of body cavities
- Visceral membrane covers surface of organs
- Secrete thin, watery substance to prevent rubbing
- Mucous membrane
- Line body surfaces open to exterior
- Ex respiratory, digestive, urinary
reproductive tracts
50Connective Tissue Membranes
- Synovial membranes
- Lines spaces between bones joints
- Secrete thick, colorless, lubricating fluid
(synovial fluid) - Fluid helps reduce friction btwn bone surfaces
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52Mechanisms of Disease Tumors Cancer
- Neoplasm new matter (tumor)
- Abnormal growth of cells
- Benign Tumors
- Do no spread to other tissues
- Slow growth
- Encapsulated
- Usually not lethal unless interfere w/ organs
53Mechanisms of Disease Tumors Cancer
- Malignant tumors (cancer)
- Not encapsulated
- Spreads (metastasizes)
- Cancer cells spread via blood or lymphatic system
- Rapid growth/spread to nearby tissue
54(Known) Causes of Cancer
- Genetic Factors
- Inherited cancer genes oncogenes
- Tumor suppressor gene fails to operate
- Usually genetic predisposition coupled with
cancer-causing mechanisms - Ex breast cancer
- Carcinogens (cancer markers)
- Affect genetic activity ? abnormal cell
reproduction - Also called mutagens
- Ex chemicals, sun, viruses
- Age
- Some cancers arise based on age
- Ex leukemia (young) colon cancer (older adults)
55Detection of Cancer
- Self-examination
- Breast and testicular exams
- Medical Imagining
- X-ray
- Ex mammogram detection of breast cancer
- CT, MRI, ultrasound
- Produce cross-section of body images for tumor
detection - Blood tests
- Look for tumor markers (ex PSA)
- Biopsy
- Removal of tumor tissue
56Cancer Treatment Options
- Stage and grade cancer
- Helps determine outcomes
- Surgical removal (if possible)
- Could leave behind malignant cells
- Chemotherapy cytotoxic (cell-killing) drugs
- Destroys remaining malignant cells
- Radiation therapy
- Destructive x-ray or gamma radiation destroys
cancer cells - Immunotherapy
- Boosting immune system again viruses
57Anthonys Textbook of Anatomy and Physiology 17th
Edition. Thibodeau, Gary A. PhD and Patton, Kevin
T. PhD. Mosby, Inc.