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Lab Exercise 6a-2 Connective Tissue Nervous Muscle.

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Presentation on theme: "Lab Exercise 6a-2 Connective Tissue Nervous Muscle."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lab Exercise 6a-2 Connective Tissue Nervous Muscle

2 Classification of connective tissues

3 Connective Tissue Connective tissue proper Fluid connective tissue Supportive connecting tissue

4 Connective tissues Connective tissue proper Loose connective tissue Areolar Adipose Reticular Dense connective tissue Dense regular Dense irregular Elastic tissue Fluid CT Blood Supporting CTs Cartilage Hyaline cartilage Elastic cartilage Fibrocartilage Bone

5 Areolar tissue A loose CTP

6 Areolar

7 Areolar: what to look for Fibroblasts Collagen fibers Elastic fibers Mast cells and macrophages Found? Throughout body, under dermis, divides skin from underlying tissues

8 Fibroblasts Resting fibroblasts typically have so little cytoplasm that the cells appear, by light microscopy, as "naked" nuclei

9 Fibroblast

10 Adipose tissue Another lose CTP (note nucleus)

11 Adipose: what to look for Lots of cytoplasm Slim nuclei pushed off the side Found? You know where

12 Reticular tissue The third type of loose CTP

13 Reticular tissue

14 Reticular: what to look for Reticular fibers (network) Found? Internal framework in many sort organs (liver, spleen) supporting the parenchyma

15 Dense CTP Dense regular – strength in one direction Dense irregular – strength in all directions Elastic tissue - pliable

16 Dense regular

17 Dense regular: what to look for Thick parallel bundles of collagen Small fibroblasts in between bundles Found? Tendons, ligaments, deep fascia.

18 Dense irregular

19 More dense irregular

20 Dense irregular: what to look for Mesh of collagen fibers (irregular looking) Interspersed fibroblasts Found? Dermis of skin, periosteum, perichondrium

21 Elastic tissue

22 Elastic tissue: what to look for Elastic fibers (instead of collagen fibers) in large bundles Fibroblasts Found? Between vertebrae, in blood vessel walls (underneath endothelium)

23 Fluid CT Blood

24 Blood: what to look for RBCs White blood cells (darker): monocytes, lymphocytes, granulocytes Platelets

25 Supportive CT Cartilage – gelatinous, padding Hyaline cartilage Elastic cartilage Fibrocartilage

26 Hyaline cartilage Glasslike because fibers not visible

27 More hyaline There are collagenous and elastic fibers lying in the cartilage matrix but they are invisible because their “refractive index” is the same as that of the matrix (like cornea)

28 More hyaline

29 Hyaline cartilage

30 Hyaline Hyaline cartilage (lavender matrix), with perichondrium (pink) outside it. The latter is a dense regular collagenous CT. Cartilage cells = chondrocytes, and they are lying in the lacunae.

31 Hyaline cart.: what to look for Chondrocytes and lacunae No visible fibers Where? Most joints, nasal septum

32 Elastic cartilage

33 Elastic Cartilage

34 Elastic cart: what to look for Many elastic fibers in matrix Chondrocytes in lacunae May be stacked up

35 Fibrocartilage

36 Fibrocartilage: what to look for Irregular, wispy collagen fibers Chondrocytes Found? Intervertabral discs of spine, pads in knee joint

37 Supportive CT: Bone

38 Detail of lacuna, showing radiating canaliculi. Tissue fluid from the capillaries and connective tissue of the Haversian canal can seep through these spaces and channels, bringing nutrients to the stellate osteocytes residing there.

39 Bone: what to look for Osteon (whole circular structure) Concentric lamellae (of matrix) Central canal (at center of lamellae) Osteoblasts Osteocytes in lacunae Canaliculi Found? Bones!

40 Nervous tissue Neuron smear Large, pyramidal cell bodies Long processes extending out

41 Nervous Tissue Figure 4.10

42 3 Types of Muscle Tissue Skeletal muscle: large body muscles responsible for movement Cardiac muscle: found only in the heart Smooth muscle: found in walls of hollow, contracting organs (blood vessels; urinary bladder; respiratory, digestive and reproductive tracts)

43 Muscle Tissue: Skeletal Long, cylindrical, multinucleate cells with obvious striations Found in skeletal muscles that attach to bones or skin

44 Muscle Tissue: Skeletal Figure 4.11a

45 Muscle Tissue: Cardiac Branching, striated, uninucleate cells interlocking at intercalated discs

46 Muscle Tissue: Cardiac Figure 4.11b

47 Muscle Tissue: Smooth Sheets of spindle-shaped cells with central nuclei that have no striations Found in the walls of hollow organs

48 Muscle Tissue: Smooth Figure 4.11c

49 Exercises Look at all slides Draw an example of each tissue on paper provided 11 connective tissues: 6 CTP (3 loose, 3 dense) 1 Fluid CT (blood) 4 Supportive CT (3 cartilage, 1 bone) Neurons 3 Muscle tissues Skeletal Striated Smooth

50 Turn in on Thurs 10/25 7 drawings from 6a-1 Epithelia 15 Drawings from 6a-2 Connective+ Review sheet for lab 6a


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