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The submucosa consists of a dense and irregular layer of connective tissue with blood vessels, lymphatics, and nerves branching into the mucosa and muscular layer.It contains the submucous plexus, and enteric nervous plexus, situated on the inner surface of the muscular layer.
Pages in category "Anatomy articles about microanatomy" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,495 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Anatomical terms of microanatomy [ edit on Wikidata ] Hepatic stellate cells ( HSC ), also known as perisinusoidal cells or Ito cells (earlier lipocytes or fat-storing cells ), are pericytes found in the perisinusoidal space of the liver , also known as the space of Disse (a small area between the sinusoids and hepatocytes ).
The neurons have particularly long and thick dendrites. The ventral dendrites, particularly, go down deeply in the pars reticulata.Other similar neurons are more sparsely distributed in the midbrain and constitute "groups" with no well-defined borders, although continuous to the pars compacta, in a pre-rubral position.
Histologic specimen being placed on the stage of an optical microscope. Human lung tissue stained with hematoxylin and eosin as seen under a microscope.. Histology, [help 1] also known as microscopic anatomy or microanatomy, [1] is the branch of biology that studies the microscopic anatomy of biological tissues.
In histology (microscopic anatomy), the lobules of liver, or hepatic lobules, are small divisions of the liver defined at the microscopic scale. The hepatic lobule is a building block of the liver tissue, consisting of a portal triad, hepatocytes arranged in linear cords between a capillary network, and a central vein.
The journal was established in 1867 as the Journal of Anatomy and Physiology. [4] The journal was conceived at the 1866 meeting of the British Association in Nottingham by founding editors George Murray Humphry (University of Cambridge), William Turner (University of Edinburgh), Alfred Newton (University of Cambridge), and Edward Perceval Wright (Trinity College Dublin). [5]
The anatomy of arteries can be separated into gross anatomy, at the macroscopic level, and microanatomy, which must be studied with a microscope.The arterial system of the human body is divided into systemic arteries, carrying blood from the heart to the whole body, and pulmonary arteries, carrying deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs.