TISSUES
TISSUE TYPES Four major tissue types Epithelial tissue Connective tissue Muscle tissue Nervous tissue
EPITHELIAL TISSUE Sheets of cells covering body surfaces or lining body cavities Form boundaries between different environments e.g., Epidermis of skin separates inside and outside of body e.g., Epithelium lining urinary bladder separates underlying cells from urine
EPITHELIAL TISSUE Many diverse functions Protection Absorption Filtration Excretion Secretion Sensory reception
EPITHELIAL TISSUE Classification According to shape: Squamous cells: Flattened like fish scales Cuboidal cells: Cube-shaped Columnar cells: Column-shaped
EPITHELIAL TISSUE Classification according to cell arrangement: Simple : one layer Stratified: more than one layer Simple epithelial Simple squamous: usually forms membranes Simple cuboidal: commonly in glands and their ducts Simple columnar: lines the entire digestive tract Pseudostratified columnar: mainly functions in absorption and secretion
EPITHELIAL TISSUE Stratified epithelial Stratified squamous: most common stratified epithelial Is found in sites that receive a good deal of abuse or friction such as the esophagus, mouth and outer skin Stratified Cuboidal and Columnar: Found mainly in the ducts of large glands
CONNECTIVE TISSUE Found everywhere in the body Four main classes Most widely distributed primary tissue Four main classes Loose connective tissue (Provides a matrix of support and cushing) eg. Adipose tissue Cartilage Bone tissue Blood
CONNECTIVE TISSUE Major functions Binding and support Protection Insulation Transportation Which of these functions are accomplished by bone and cartilage? Fat? Blood?
NERVOUS TISSUE Main component of the nervous system Brain, spinal cord, and nerves Regulates and controls body functions Two main cell types Neurons Generate and conduct nerve impulses Supporting cells Non-conducting cells that support, insulate, and protect neurons
MUSCLE TISSUE Highly cellular Well vascularized Responsible for most types of body movement Possess myofilaments Actin and myosin Three types Skeletal muscle Cardiac muscle Smooth muscle
TISSUE REPAIR Injured cells release growth factors Stimulate cells to divide and migrate Two major tissue repair means: Regeneration Replacement of destroyed tissue with same type of tissue Fibrosis Replacement with fibrous connective tissue (scar tissue) Type of repair dependent upon Type of tissue damaged Severity of injury
TISSUE REPAIR The regenerative capacity of different tissues varies widely Some tissues regenerate extremely well e.g., Epithelial, bone, blood-forming tissue Some tissues have a moderate regenerative capacity e.g., Smooth muscle, dense regular connective tissue Some tissues have a weak regenerative capacity e.g., Skeletal muscle, cartilage Some tissues have a virtually no functional regenerative capacity e.g., Cardiac muscle, nervous tissue
TISSUE REPAIR In non-regenerative tissue and severe wounds, damaged tissue is replaced by fibrosis Resulting scar tissue is strong, but lacks flexibility, elasticity, and function of normal tissue