Human Anatomy Quiz 2 (chapter 3) Flashcards

1
Q

Adipose Tissue

A

a connective tissue characterized by the presence of large numbers of adipocytes (fat cells). It occurs subcutaneously, in the medullary cavities of bones, and elsewhere, serving as a stored source of body energy.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Apocrine secretion

A

a secretory mode of glandular epithelium in which part of the cell physically breaks away to form the secretory product. Apocrine secretion contrasts with merocrine secretion where no part of the cell enters the secretory product, and with holocrine secretion where the cell die and slough to become the secretion.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Basic tissue

A

any one of the four main categories of body tissue: epithelium, muscle tissue, connective tissue, and nervouse tissue.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Biopsy

A

removal of cells or tissue from a living organism, typically for laboratory analysis.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Blood

A

A liquid connective tissue. it is the only body liquid with a cell concentration high enough to deserve the label “tissue.”

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Bone marrow tissue

A

the major material occupying the medullary cavities of bones. it is a subtype of connective tissue and is called red bone marrow when actively hemopoietic; yellow bone marrow when it contains a high population of adipocytes, and gelatinous bone marrow when it involutes with senility.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Bone tissue

A

a maneralized subtype of connective tissue. it is the only body material routinely mineralized except for the enamel, dentin, and cementum of teeth, and it forms a major structural components of (the organs called) bones.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Cartilage

A

a connective tissue with a firm but typically unmineralized extracellular matrix. it is devided into three subtypes based primarily on the major type of proteinaceous fibers found in the matrix: elastic cartilage (containing elastic fibers), fibrocartilage (containing collagenous fibers), and hyaline cartilage (containing reticular fibers).

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Connective tissue proper (fibrous connective tissue)

A

one of several subtypes of connective tissue. connective tissue proper is the most widely distributed connective tissue and forms part of every organ.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Extracellular matrix

A

the material outside of and between cells. in many tissues it includes various types of proteinaceous fibers as well as well as amorphous protein/polysaccharide material called ground substance.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Fiber

A

a term used in various contexts to mean a muscle cell, a neuronal process, or a protein component of the extracellular matrix. Proteinaceous extracellular fibers include those composed of elastin, collagen, and reticulin

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Glandular epithelium

A

epithelium that is specialized for secretion. Although glandular epithelial cells are scattered within the surface epithelium of mucous membranes, most glandular epithelium is concentrated in the secretory organs called glands.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Grounds substance

A

the protein/polysaccharide component (“glue”) of the extracellular matrix. the polysaccharide portion is often formed by polymers of chondroitin sulfate, keratin sulfate, and hyaluronic acid.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Histology

A

literally, “the study of tissue”. in usage, histology is equivalent to microscopic anatomy.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Membranous (surface) epithelium

A

the tissue that forms all outer surfaces of the body and lines all of its lumina and cavities. Membranous epithelium is classified according the the shape of the surface cells (squamous, cuboidal, columnar) and whether it is one cell this (simple) or more than on cell thick (stratified).

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Mesenchyme

A

primitaive connective tissue containing a large population of undifferentiated (stem) cells. Mesenchyme is concentrated in the intervertebral discs and small amounts are present in the loose connective tissue around vessels.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

Muscle tissue

A

the basic tissue functionally specialized of contraction. Three subtypes exist, skeletal muscle tissue (voluntary and striated), smooth muscle tissue (involuntary, not striated) and cardiac muscle tissue (involuntary and striated).

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

Neuroglial (glial) cell

A

a collective term encompassing the support cells of the nervous system. Neuroglia do not transmit impulses, but they support neurons physically and metabolically.

19
Q

Neuron (nerve cell)

A

a cell specialized for impulse transmission. Each neuron has a single process termed the axon and one or more processes called dendrites.

20
Q

Primary germ layer

A

any of the three defined strata that are formed during embryonic gastrulation: extoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. These germ layers differentiate to form the various tissues.

21
Q

Regenerative capacity

A

the ability of a given type of cell or tissue to replace itself if lost, injured, or diseased. Epithelium and connective tissue have high regenerative capacity, but nervouse tissue and muscle tissue have low regenerative capabilities.

22
Q

Define Histology

A

Study of tissues

23
Q

Define Extracellular matrix.
What does it consists of (two things)?
Define two things?

A

the material outside and between cells. Typically produced/secreted by cells.
Consists of extracellular fibers and ground substance
Extracellular fibers: Protein
Ground substance: the protein/polysaccharide component (“glue”) of the extracellular matrix.

24
Q

Three primary germ layers

A
  1. Extoderm - forms the outer epithelium and all nervous tissue of the body
    Mesoderm - forms all of the connective tissue, all of the muscle tissue, and all the epithelium lining the vessels and body cavities.
    Endoderm - forms the lining epithelium of most parts of the visceral body systems.
25
Q

compare the four basic tissues in regards to type and quantity of intercellular material

A

Epithelial Tissue - essentially none
Muscle Tissue - small amount of connective tissue proper
Connective Tissue - abundant fibers and ground substance
Nervous Tissue - essentially none

26
Q

Compare the four basic tissues in regards to germ layer origin

A

Epithelial Tissue - ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm
Muscle Tissue - mesoderm
Connective Tissue - mesoderm
Nervous Tissue - ectoderm

27
Q

Compare the four basic tissues in regards to regenerative capacity

A

Epithelial Tissue - high
Muscle Tissue - low
Connective Tissue - high
Nervous Tissue - low

28
Q

Compare the four basic tissues in regards to major subtypes

A

Epithelial Tissue - membranous and glandular epitheliem
Muscle Tissue - smooth, cardiac, and skeletal muscle tissue
Connective Tissue - c.t. proper, bone, blood, cartilage, adipose tissue, and several others.
Nervous Tissue - not subdivided into types but has 2 major cell types

29
Q

Compare the four basic tissues in regards to their function

A

Epithelial Tissue - secretes and covers surfaces
Muscle Tissue - contracts
Connective Tissue - Joins other structures
Nervous Tissue - Conducts impulses

30
Q

Muscle Tissue
Three different types of muscle tissues
1. What nervous control does each tissue have? (voluntary or involuntary)
2. State the appearance of each (striated or non-striated)
3. State the shape of each
4. State the number and position of nuclei

A

Skeletal muscle tissues - found in muscles that move body observably.

  1. voluntary
  2. striated
  3. cylindrical
  4. many/peripheral
  5. Cardiac muscle tissues - found in the contractile parts of the heart
    1. involuntary
    2. striated
    3. “y”-shaped
    4. one/central
  6. Smooth muscle tissues - found within walls of blood vessels, visceral organs, at the base of hair follicles, and within the iris and ciliary body of the eye.
    1. involuntary
    2. non-striated (lower organization of myrofiibrils)
    3. fusiform
    4. one/central
31
Q
Epithelial Tissue
Differentiate the two major categories of epithelium on...
1. blood supply
2. presence of basement membrane
3. general location in body
A

Membranous epithelium
1. lacks blood vessels - exchanges nutrients and wastes with adjacent tissues by diffusion.
2. cells are separated from basement membrane
3. covers outer surfaces and lines inner surfaces of the body.
Glandular epithelium
1. highly vascularized
2. lacks basement membrane
3. Found in parenchyma (secretory portion) of glands.

32
Q

Epithelial Tissue

Classify membranous epithelium into six categories according to thickness and shape of surface cells.

A

thickness:
Simple epithelia (one cell layer thick)
stratified epithelia (two or more cell layers thick)
Shape
Squamos - flattened
cuboidal - globular
columnar - elongated
Simple squamos, simple cuboidal, simple columnar, stratified squamos, stratified cuboidal, stratified columnar epithelium

33
Q

Epithelial Tissue
Name and state the location of two types of membranous epithelium that do not fit the usual classification scheme. What is meant by “respiratory” epithelium?

A

Pseudostratified columnar epithelium: appears to be one cell thick but all cells are in contact with the basement membrane. Lines the air conducting passageways of the respiratory system (“respiratory epithelium”)
Transitional epithelium - appears to be several layers of cuboidal cells but all make contact with the basement membrane. It is found in the urinary bladder, ureters, and urethra.

34
Q

Epithelial Tissue

Discuss the kinds and functions of modifications found in the surface cells of membranous epithelium (3 kinds).

A
  1. Cilia - long projections that cells use to propel materials along the surface.
  2. Microvilli - numerous projections smaller than cilia. These are used to increase surface area to facilitate absorption.
    Keratin - dense protein manufactured by stratified squamos epipthelium of the skin. imparts physical strength and resistance to drying.
35
Q

Epithelial Tissue
Define the following terms used to classify glandular epithelium and glands: endocrine/exocrine; simple/compound; acinar, tubular, tubuloacinar; eccrine (merocrine), apocrine, and holocrine.

A

Endocrine: no connection to surface and secrete their products directly into bloodstream.
Exocrine: located at surface or by having a duct that reaches surface.
Classified by mode of secretion:
Eccrine - watery secretion
Apocrine - Parts of cells become secretion
Holocrine - Entire cells become secretion
Classified by shape of duct:
Simple - non-branching
Compound - branching
Classified by shape of secratory part:
Tubular - tube like
Acinar - spherical
tubuloacinar - combination

36
Q

Epithelial Tissue

Differentiate the development of endocrine vs. exocrine glands.

A

All Glandular Epithelium is derived from Membranous Epithelium. Glandular Epithelium that maintains a surface is exocrine glands. Glands that lose all connections to the surface are called endocrine glands.

37
Q

Connective Tissue
List three components found in all connective tissues.
List the major types of connective tissue and state where they are located in the body

A

Cells, fibers, and ground substance.
Major types:
Connective tissue proper - tendons, ligaments, fascia, periosteum, endosteum, epimysium, framework for most organs
Bone tissue - within the named bones of the body
Cartilage - articular surfaces of bones, costal cartilages, intervertebral discs, pinna of ear, tracheal cartilages
Blood - within cardiovascular system
Adipose tissue - within subcutaneous tissue, medullary cavities of bones, peritoneum, pericardium

38
Q

Connective Tissue

Classify connective tissue proper on the basis of density, arrangement and fiber composition.

A

Density
fibers are tightly packed (dense) or have considerable space (loose).
Arrangement
Fibers are arranged in parallel manner (regular) or are not parallel (irregular)
Composition
Collagenous fibers - collagen (strong)
Elastic fibers - elastin (flexible)
Reticular fibers - reticulin (smaller collagen)

39
Q

Connective Tissue

Name the subtypes of cartilage and state the predominant fiber type present in each (3 subtypes).

A
  1. Fibrocartilage - dense collagenous fibers
  2. Elastic cartilage - significant numbers of elastic fibers
  3. Hyaline cartilage - delicate reticular fibers.
40
Q

Nervous Tissue

Differentiate the two groups of cells found in nervous tissue.

A
  1. Neurons - conduct nervous impulses

2. Neuroglia - performs a number of other functions

41
Q

Define axon and dendrite.

A

Axon: Neuronal process that carry impulses away from the cell bodies.
Dendrite: processes that conduct impulses toward the cell bodies.

42
Q

Clinical case 1

Why does a surgeon cut the bony prominence to reflect the whole muscle, instead of cutting the muscle or tendon itself?

A

Bone tissue regenerates with no loss of function whereas, muscle and/or tendons do not regenerate.

43
Q

Clinical case 2
A person has unstable knees and shoulders. Analysis of collaben from a biopsy of one of his tendons indicated an abnormal amino acid sequence. How could this fact relate to his clinical problems?

A

Collagen is the principle fiber type in connective tissue proper structures including tendons and ligaments. Safe to assume that person has a genetic defect resulting in an error of producing collagen