1 / 21

II. Connective Tissue

· Supports and protects body parts · Manufactures blood cells Composed of widely scattered cells. Lie within nonliving material. 2 types of cells 1 . P roduces and maintains intercellular material which are composed of 3 types of protein fibers A. collagenous   B. elastic

batess
Télécharger la présentation

II. Connective Tissue

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ·Supports and protects body parts ·Manufactures blood cells Composed of widely scattered cells. Lie within nonliving material 2 types of cells 1. Produces and maintains intercellular material which are composed of 3 types of protein fibers A. collagenous   B. elastic  C. reticular 2. protects tissue from infection II. Connective Tissue

  2. 3 Types of Protein Fibers • Collagenous fibers (collagen) • Elastic fibers (elastin) • Reticular fibers (reticulum)

  3. 1. Collagenous Fibers (Collagen) · Most abundant (10% total body weight) · Thick wave like strands · Flexible but tensile (resists stretching) · Found in tendons (connect muscle to bones) · Also used by body for tissue repair *scar tissue, binds skin tightly together

  4. 2. Elastic Fibers (Elastin) ·  Not as strong as collagen ·  Elasticity and extensibility * Pinch skin and it returns to its normal shape

  5. 3. Reticular Fibers (Reticulum) · Resists physical stress • Not abundant in connective tissue

  6. 4 Types of Connective Tissue • Based on density of proteins) 1. Connective tissue proper 2.Cartilage 3.Bone 4. Blood-forming tissue and blood

  7. 1. Connective Tissue Proper • · Each type has a cell called fibroblast which produces the intercellular • material • ·3 types based on the fibroblast a. Loose connective tissue b. Adipose tissue c. Dense connective tissue

  8. a. Loose Connective Tissue ·Most widespread · Structural anchor to body parts · Between skin and muscles · Surfaces of organs • Known as areolar tissue (referring to little area)

  9. b. AdiposeTissue · Fat cells called adipocytes · Fat stored as triglycerides • Provides insulation and padding between organs

  10. c. Dense Connective Tissue · Tightly packed protein fibers · Regular or irregular · Regular are fibers parallel to each other like tendons and ligaments (connect bones to bones) • irregular are fibers not parallel like deep layers of skin (dermis) and external wrap around bones and cartilage.

  11. 2. Cartilage ·Harder than connective tissue proper ·Protein fibers in thickened gel-like ground substance called matrix ·Matrix maintained by “gristle” cells called chondrocytes that lie in small chambers called lacunae which get nourishment from the perichondrium (dense connective tissue) · 3 types of cartilage a.Hyaline b.Elastic c.Fibrocartilage

  12. a. Hyaline · Bluish white · Respiratory tract · Ends of bones at movable joints • Ends of ribs

  13. b. Elastic · Yellowish · Framework of ears · End of nose • Epiglottis (small opening to larynx)

  14. c. Fibrocartilage ·Thick collagenous fibers ·Joints like knees • Between intervertebral discs (padded joints)

  15. QUESTIONS Packet pp.59-60

  16. 3. Bone ·Intercellular material is mineral salts and collagenous fibers ·Hardest and most durable of all tissue. Dense matrix • Composed of matrix of osteocytes embedded in lacunae (chambers). Nourished by periosteum which is a membrane surrounding the bone. Canaliculi are channels through which nutrients reach bone cells

  17. 2 Types of Bone a. Compact bone b. Spongy bone

  18. b. Spongy Bone · Not dense, have spaces called red marrow (blood forming tissue) ·Form thin plates called spicules • Interior of bones • Packet p.61

  19. a. Blood-forming tissue · Manufactures cellular components of blood · Contains 3 components i. Stem cells (produce blood cells) ii. Young blood cells (newly formed) iii. Protein (lacks collagen, so is softest connective tissue) 2 types i. Red marrow · Hematopoietic tissue (initiates production of all cells) ii. Lymphoid tissue · In lymph nodes · In tonsils · Spleen, thymus · Iit is maturation site of 2 types of W.B.C. 1. Lymphocytes 2. Monocytes 4. a.) Blood-Forming Tissue and b.) Blood

  20. b. Blood ·The WBC, RBC and platelets are called formed elements and are surrounded by a fluid matrix called plasma · Formed elements means the fibers of the matrix are dissolved proteins • Carries respiratory gases, nutrients and wastes

  21. Packet p. 62 • Packet pages 57-62 should now be done • Quiz on all notes through blood

More Related