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Contents:

                                       35. Ovarium, corpus luteum
01. Labium oris (lip)                  36. Tuba uterina – ampulla
02. Apex linguae (top of tongue)       37. Tuba uterina – isthmus
03. Papilla circumvallata              38. Uterus – proliferative phase
04. Tonsilla lingualis                 39. Uterus – secretory phase
05. Palatum molle                      40. Vagina
06. Tonsilla palatina                  41. Labium minus
07. Tooth                              42. Hypophysis cerebri
08. Glandula parotis                   43. Epiphysis
09. Glandula submandibularis           44. Glandula thyreoidea
10. Glandula sublingualis              45. Glandula parathyreoidea
11. Oesophagus                         46. Corpus suprarenale
12. Cardia                             47. Thymus
13. Fundus ventriculi                  48. Artery and Vein
14. Pylorus                            49. Aorta
15. Duodenum                           50. Vena cava
16. Intestinum tenue                   51. Myocardium
17. Intestinum crassum                 52. Lymphonodus
18. Appendix                           53. Lien (spleen)
19. Hepar (liver)                      54. Skin from the top of finger
20. Vesica fellea (gall bladder)       55. Skin from the axilla
21. Pancreas                           56. Skin with hairs
22. Epiglottis                         57. Nail
23. Larynx                             58. Mamma non lactans
24. Trachea                            59. Mamma lactans
25. Pulmo (lung)                       60. Cortex cerebri
26. Ren (kidney)                       61. Cerebellum
27. Urethra                            62. Medulla spinalis (spinal cord)
28. Vesica urinalis (urinary           63. Ganglion
bladder)                               64. Peripheral nerve
29. Testis                             65. Anterior segment of the eye
30. Epididymis                         66. Posterior segment of the eye
31. Funiculus spermaticus (spermatic   67. Palpebra
cord)                                  68. Auricle
32. Glandula vesiculosa (seminal       69. Umbilical cord
vesicle)                               70. Placenta
33. Prostata
34. Penis
1. Labium oris
Musculus Obicularis Oris is present (skeletal muscle)

On the external surface is the skin with its adnexa

On the inner surface is the mucosa (stratified squamous epithelium +
lamina propria) and submucosa with mixed glands “Labial glands“).




2. Apex lingua
Underneath the papillae, there are mucous and serous glands, pockets of
adipose tissue, and a layer of skeletal muscle and connective tissue.

The skeletal muscle is arranged in three different planes, which allows the
tongue to perform a number of complex movements.
3. Papilla Circumvallata
Surrounded by a deep furrow, where Ebners Glands open.

Epithelia covering papilla (stratified squamous non-keratinizing).

Taste buds are located on the lateral sides, in the epithelium.




4. Tonsilla lingualis
A lymphatic structure that contains abundant germinal centers where
immune cells undergo differentiation.
Surface is covered with stratified squamous epithelium.




5. Soft palate:
On the nasal side it is possible to see:
 – pseudostratified epithelium
- lamina propria
- submucosa with mixed glands “Nasal Glands“
5. Soft palate:
On the oral side it is possible to see:
 – lining mucosa of the mouth cavity
- submucosa with mucous glands “Palatine Glands“




5. Hard palate:
Covered by masticatory mucosa (stratified squamous epithelium)

Note bone at the top, mucosa at the bottom and a large amount of salivary
tissue between.

A short distance from the lamina propria there is a large duct.




6. Tonsilla palatina
The tonsils share some histological features with lymph nodes:

1. Cells in the tonsils are supported by a fine network of reticular fibres
2. High-endothelial (postcapillary ~) venules function in the "homing" of
circulating lymphocytes - this is actually a shared feature of all lymphoid
tissues and organs.
The palatine tonsils are surrounded by a thick hemicapsule of connective
tissue, which delimits them from the pharyngeal muscle and facilitates their
removal in tonsillitis.
7. Tooth
   Pulp – jelly-like connective tissue with blood capillaries and fine nerve
   fibers. Odontoblasts are located on the external surface.
   Dentin –shows fine striation, caused by dentin tubules (contain the
   cytoplasmic processes of odontoblasts); dentin is stained in red or red-
   violet color, except thin layer near the odontoblasts – predentin (is not
   calcified) and peripheral layer below cementum and enamel (is
   irregularly calcified), dentin is pale in this layers.
   Enamel – is not present in decalcified tooth (it dissolves during
   decalcification).
   Cementum – covers the root(s) of the tooth; the thickest layer is on the
   root apex(es); it is not possible to distinguish primary (acellular) and
   secondary (cellular; with cementocytes) cementum in the light
   microscope.
   Periodontium – bundles of collagenous fibers, which hold the dental root
   in bone alveolus (rarely present in slides).


8. Parotid Gland
A, Serous acini; B, Striated ducts; C, Ecretory duct
Parotid gland – only serous (alveolar = acinar) gland
Only serous
intercalated – striated – interlobular – main
The gland is internally divided into lobules. Blood vessels and nerves enter
the glands at the hilum and gradually branch out into the lobules.
Consists of paired glands surrounded with a connective tissue capsule; septa
running from the capsule separate the glandular parenchyma into lobes and
lobules. Blood vessels, nerves and interlobular ducts are found in the
connective tissue of septa. Parenchyma is composed of intralobular ducts
and secretory portions of glands.
They consists of connective tissue = capsule + septa and
  parenchyma of lobules = ducts + secretory portions


9.Submandibular Gland
A, Mucous acini; B, Serous acini
mixed (80 % serous)
serous acini                 mucouse tubuli
intercalated – striated – interlobular – main
10. Sublingual gland
A, Mucous acini of sublingual gland

mixed (80 % mucous)

mucous tubuli                  + lunuly of Ginuzzi

only: interlobular – main




11. Oesophagus
The esophagus consists of three layers: mucosa, submucosa, and muscularis.
The mucosa consists of epithelial lining containing nonkeratinizing, stratified
squamous epithelium with a layer of basal and parabasal cells. This layer is
naturally required to proliferate more often than other layers of the
oesophagus in accordance to necessary cell loss.

The sublayer, lamina propria, contains vessels, connective tissue, lymphatics,
inflammatory cells and esophageal cardiac glands which are mucus secreting
glands. The submucosa contains dense connective tissue with both lymph
and blood vessels. Further esophageal mucus secreting glands are contained
in the submucosa. The outer layer, the muscularis, consists of two muscle
layers. The inner muscle layer fibers are arranged circumferentially and the
outer layer, longitudinally.

12. Cardia
On histological examination, the junction can be identified by the following
transition.

     nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium in the esophagus
     simple columnar epithelium in the stomach
The cardiac glands can be seen in this region.
They can be distinguished from other stomach glands (fundic glands and
pyloric glands) because the glands are shallow and simple tubular.
13.Fundus ventriculi
(vertical section to the surface of mucosa, HE)


A.   Tunica mucosa – see areae gastricae and foveolae gastrice
   1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall, simple columnar epithelium with
       secretory granules in the cell apexes,
   2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar connective tissue with tubular
       glands - gll. gastricae propriae. In each gland, basis (near lamina
       muscularis mucosae), body and neck is distinguished; the gland is
       opened into the gastric pit throughout the neck.
       The cells of gll. gastricae:
       – chief cells - (pepsinogenous) - located predominantly at the basis,
           they have prismatic shape and basophilic cytoplasm,
       – parietal cells - (HCl cells) - in the body and below the neck, the
           cells are round triangular, their cytoplasm is strongly eosinophilic,
       – the cell of neck - light and columnar in the neck (their product is
           mucus),
       – endocrine cells - cannot be identified in slides stained with HE,
   3. lamina muscularis mucosae – 2 layers of smooth muscle cells (inner -
       circular, outer - longitudinal).
B. Tela submucosa - areolar connective tissue with vessels and nerves.
C. Tunica muscularis (externa) – 3 layers of smooth muscle cells: oblique,
   circular and longitudinal layer.
D. Tunica serosa:
   1. simple squamous epithelium - mesotel,
   2. lamina propria serosae – thin layer of collagenous connective tissue.


14. Pylorus
deeper gastric pits, reticular conn. tissue, pyloric glands




15. Duodenum
(longitudinal section through the wall, HE)


    A. Tunica mucosa – typical organization: villi intestinales; crypts of
         Lieberkühn
              1. lamina epithelialis mucosae –simple columnar epithelium
                 composed of absorptive cells and secretory cells (see
                 descrition of the intestinum tenue)
              2. lamina propria mucosae - reticular connective tissue with
                 lymphatic nodules (formes underlying tissue of intestinal
                 villi and surrounds the crypts of Lieberkühn),
              3. lamina muscularis mucosae – smooth muscle tissue.
B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue whith mucous glands –
   Brunner´s glands (an important signe of this part of small intestine!).
C. Tunica muscularis (externa) - 2 layers of smooth muscle cells: inner
   circular and outer longitudinal.
D. Tunica serosa – see description of the stomach.
16. Intestinum tenue - jejunum
(longitudinal section through the wall, HE)


Prior to study in microscope see plicae semicirculares Kerckringi, which are
formed by mucosa and submucosa.
A. Tunica mucosa – typical organization of the surface: villi intestinales -
    intestinal villi (their axis is made up of reticular connective tissue of
    lamina propria mucosae) with central lymphatic vessel (lacteal vessel) in
    each villus; crypts of Lieberkühn - tubular invagination among villi, their
    bases reach lamina muscularis mucosae:
    1. Lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall, simple columnar epithelium
        composed of absorptive cells - enterocytes and secretory cells:
        – goblet cells - thei have cup-like shape, flattened nucleus and very
            pale cytoplasm containing mucus, goblet cells are diffused in the
            epithelium and their number increased in aboral direction,
        – cells of Paneth - round triangular or pyramidal shape, spherical
            nucleus, eosinophilic granules in cytoplazm, the cells are located
            only in basis of crypts of Lieberkühn (these cells are unstained in
            older slides because the granules are discolored),
        – endocrine cells - cannot be identified in slides stained with HE,
    2. lamina propria mucosae - reticular connective tissue with lymphatic
        nodules (formes underlying tissue of intestinal villi and surrounds the
        crypts of Lieberkühn),
    3. lamina muscularis mucosae – smooth muscle tissue.
B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue, whish also forms the axis of
    folds of Kerckring (plicae semicirculares Kerckringi).
C. Tunica muscularis (externa) - 2 layers of smooth muscle cells: inner
    circular and outer longitudinal.
D. Tunica serosa – see description of the stomach.
17. Intestinum crassum
(longitudinal section through the wall, HE)


Plicae semicirculares Kerckringi and intestinal villi are NOT present – luminal
surface is smooth.
A. Tunica mucosa:
    1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall columnar epithelium consists of
        absorptive cells – enterocytes,
    2. lamina propria mucosae – reticular connective tissue with lymphatic
        nodules; crypts of Lieberkühn are deep and numerous, they are lined
        with the same epithelium (ad 1.); except enterocytes, numerous
        goblet cells and some enteroendocrine cells (are not visible in LM) are
        present in the epithelium,
    3. lamina muscularis mucosae – smooth muscle tissue.
B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue with blood vessels and nerves
    (plexus submucosus Meissneri).
C. Tunica muscularis (externa) – two layers of smooth muscle cells bundles
    – inner circular and outer longitudinal (nerve – plexus myentericus
    Auerbachi in connective tissue between them).
D. Tunica serosa (see practice nr. 2).



18. Processus vermiformis, appendix
(cross section, HE)


A.   Tunica mucosa – intestinal villi are missing, crypts of Lieberkühn are
   shallow and irregular:
   1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple collumnar epithelium
       composed of enterocytes, goblet cells and enteroendocrine cells,
   2. lamina propria mucosae – reticular connective tissue with numerous
       active lymphatic nodules,
   3. lamina muscularis mucosae – usually is missing or irregular.
B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue with vesssels and nerves.
C. Tunica muscularis (externa) – thin layers of smooth muscle tissue
   (circular and longitudinal layer).
D. Tunica serosa - mesothelium and thin layer of collagenous connective
   tissue.
19. Hepar
(Hematoxylin-eosin or Azan)


A.  Liver connective tissue (c.t.):
   1. capsula fibrosa hepatis – dense collagenous c.t. (it is present only in
      some slides),
   2. c.t. in portal areas – loose c.t.; portal area has triangular shape and is
      surrounded by 3 – 4 morphological units = liver lobules of central vein;
      c.t. of portal area carries interlobular brunches of a.hepatica, v.portae
      and interlobular bile duct,
   3. interlobular c.t. – separates liver lobules in the rest of their surface
      (outside the portal areas), only minimum of this c.t. is in human liver.
B. Liver parenchyma – consists of morphological units = lobules of central
   vein (liver lobules) and intrahepatic bile ducts:
   1. lobules of central vein – five to six–sided polyhedral prisms in the
      sections, composed of plates (cords in the sections) of hepatocytes;
      plates (cords) are organized radialy around v. centralis:
      – hepatic plates – consist of 1 - 2 lines of hepatocytes, which
           surround bile canaliculi (are not visible in the sections),
      – liver sinusoids – are situated between plates, have an irregular
           width of the lumen, and are lined with endothelium; Kupffer cells
           are present in the regions where the sinusids are branched,
      – vena centralis – thinwalled vein in the center of the lobule
           (endothelium and thin layer of loose c.t.),


Functional unit:
portal lobule (lobule of portal vein) – parts of parenchyma of 3
morphological units surrounding common portal area (triangular region with
portal area in the center – join central veins of 3 nighbour liver lobules)
smaller unit is liver acinus – parencyma of 2 liver lobules arround common
circumlobular side.

     2.    intrahepatic bile ducts:
          – canals of Herring – continue bile canaliculi and are lined with
             simple cuboid epithelium (canals are located at the periphery of
             the lobules).
          – interlobular bile ducts – simple cuboid to columnar epithelium – in
             portal areas.
          – lobar bile ducts – are two; their wall consists of tall columnar
             epithelium, lamina basalis and a layer of c.t. (are not found in the
             slides).
20. Vesica fellea
(Hematoxylin - eosin)


Tunica mucosa: numerous mucosal folds


     1.   lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall columnar epithelium (produce
          mucus),
     2. lamina propria mucosae – reticular connective tissue with
          lymphatic nodules; crypts of Lieberkühn are deep and numerous,
          they are lined with the same epithelium (ad 1.); except
          enterocytes, numerous goblet cells and some enteroendocrine cells
          (are not visible in LM) are present in the epithelium,
     A.     lamina muscularis mucosae – is NOT present.
B.   Tela submucosa – is NOT present.
C.   Tunica muscularis (externa) –smooth muscle tissue (longitudinal and
     oblique orientation).
D.   Tunica serosa – covers free surface of gall bladder and has very thick
     layer of subserosal c.t.; the surface turned to the liver tissue is covered
     with adventitia.




21. Pancreas
(Hematoxylin - eosin)


A.   Connective tissue (c.t.):
   1. dense collagenous c.t. of capsule and septa, which carry blood
       vessels and interlobular ducts, septa separate gland into the lobules,
   2. loose c.t. inside of lobules (intralobular c.t.).
B. Parenchyma – lobules; each of them contains elongated serous acini
   (exocrine part of gland), intralobular ducts and one or more islet(s) of
   Langerhans (endocrine part of gland without ducts):
   1. serous acini:
       – serous cells – triangular or pyramid shape, nucleus at the basis of
          the cell, secretory granules in supranuklear zone of cytoplasm
          (granules stain intensely),
       – centroacinar cells – polygonal shape, pale cytoplasm; cells are
          situated only in the center of acinus,
   2. ducts – intercalated and interlobular:
       – intercalated – simple squamous epithelium, narrow lumen
          (identification is dificult),
       – intralobular ducts – arrise by fusion of intercalated ducts, simple
          cuboid epithelium (epithelial cells without basal straition – they
          have not basal labyrinth),
   3. islets of Langerhans:
       – fine capsule (with fine collagen and reticular fibers) separates the
          islet from acini,
       – cord of glandular endocrine cells – cells are polyhedral and pale
          (the main identifying sign); blood sinusoids form a network around
          cords of the cells.
Notice: endocrine celss is not possible to classify in HE slides.
22. Epiglottis
Epiglottis prevents food from entering the trachea.

  Structure:                                                              -
plate of elastic cartilage                                                -
lingual side: stratiffied squamous epithelium + lamina    propria,
- laryngeal side: pseudostratified columnar epithelium with cilia + mixed
glands in lamina propria,
23. Larynx
This area of the larynx is typified by two items: (1) hyaline cartilage (lower
left) and (2) sero-mucous glands (upper right). Epithelium is usually
pseudostratified columnar ciliated.

                                                    the wall structure:
- mucosa – epithelium of respiratory passages + lamina propria with elastic
fibers and mixed glands                      - fibrocartilagenous layer with
large hyaline and small elastic cartilages
- external muscle coat = skeletal muscle tissue

The organ of fonation
- laryngeal ventricle (vestibule)
- plica vocalis (with stratified squamous epithelium, elastic ligament –
ligamentum vocale and skeletal muscle – musculus vocalis)
- plica ventricularis (the same structure as in the larynx wall




24. Trachea
Hollow tubular organ – structure of its wall:

- mucosa – epithelium of respiratory passages + lamina propria with elastic
fibers and mixed glands                    - fibrocartilagenous layer with ring-
shaped, dorsaly opened hyaline cartilages (16 – 20), dorsal part of the wall is
called paries membranaceus – cartilage is substituted by tracheal muscle
(smooth)                                            - adventitia (connective
tissue with nerves and blood vessels)
25. Lung parenchyma
Lung lobule – part of parenchyme, which is ventilated by one terminal
bronchiole. This bronchiole branches into respiratory bronchioli and these are
branched into alveolar ducts. The ends of ducts are dilated into sacs. The wall
of ducts and sacs is very thin and alvoli bulge from it.

Thin wall of alveoli (0.2 µm) = interalveolar septum: consists of fine reticular
and elastic fibers surrounding blood capillaries and some alveolar
macrophages and is covered with respiratory epithelium on both sides
(luminal surfaces of alveoli). Alveolar pores – in septa.




Respiratory epithelium: simple epithelium with 2 types of cells

    -    alveolar cells type I (membranous pneumocytes) – transport of
         gasses by pinocytosis
    -    alveolar cells type II (granular pneumocytes) – produce surfactant
         (antiatelectatic substance)

The lungs are large, lobed, paired organs in the chest (also known as the
thoracic cavity). Thin sheets of epithelium (pleura) separate the inside of the
chest cavity from the outer surface of the lungs. The bottom of the thoracic
cavity is formed by the diaphragm
26. Ren
           (perpendicular section to the surface of kidney, HE or HES
           and Weigert-van Gieson)


           A.  Connective tissue (c.t.):
              1. capsula fibrosa renis – dense colagenous c.t.,
              2. interstitial loose c.t. of renal parenchyma (more in
                 renal medulla, less in renal cortex).
           B. Parenchyma of kidney – cortex and medulla:
              1. cortex (substantia corticalis) – bellow capsula
                 fibrosa renis and as columnae renales between
                 pyramids of medulla. Cortex corticis (continuous
                 layer of cortex bellow capsule), pars radiata corticis
                 above the bases of medullary pyramids – with strips
                 of cortex and medulla (striae medullares corticis).
^cortex          Substantia corticalis contains renal corpuscles and
                 some parts of renal tubules:
                 – renal corpuscle (corpusculum renis): glomerulum
                     - small ball of blood capillaries surrounded by
                     mesangial cells + Bowman´s capsule (capsula
                     glomeruli), made up of parietal and visceral
                     layer with thin space between them (urinary
                     space), in which glomerular urin is collected;
                         - parietal layer – simple squamous
                         epithelium + basement membrane,
                         - visceral layer – podocytes (flattened cells
                         which closely adjoin basement membrane of
                         capillaries).
                 – urinary tubule (its parts):
                         - proximal convoluted tubule – has irregular
                         lumen and is lined with simple lower-
                         collumnar epithelium with brush border on
                         luminal surface, borders between cells are
                         not distinct and nuclei are irregularly
                         scattered around lumen, cell cytoplams is
                         intensly eosinophilic; cells are situated on the
                         basement membrane,
                         - distal convoluted tubule – has regular
                         lumen, lined with simple cuboidal epithelium
                         without brush border, cell nuclei are regularly
                         arranged around the lumen, cell cytoplasm
                         stains lightly eosinophilic; basement
                         membrane,
                         - connecting segment (arched collecting
                         tubules) – similar to distal tubule,


           Notice: it is dificult to find vascular or uriniferous pole of
                renal corpuscle or macula densa, because only small
^medulla        amount of corpuscles are sectioned throughout this
poles.

     2.    medulla of kidney (substantia medullaris) forms
          pyramids and striae medullares corticis; medulla
          contains:
            – pars recta of proximal tubule – the same
                 morphological signs as in pars convoluta (see
                 above),
            – Henle´s loop (ansa nephroni):
             - thin segment – simple squamous epithelium +
                 basement membrane,
             - thick segment – simple cuboidal epithelium +
                 basement membrane,
            – collecting tubules – lumen is wider than in
                 renal tubules; simple cuboidal to lower-
                 columnar epithelium (cell cytoplasm is very
                 pale and apical parts of the cells form konvex
                 protrusions) + basement membrane,
            – ductus papillares (Bellini) – occure near the
                 top of pyramid; they have the widest lumen
                 lined with pale and tall columnar cells on the
                 basement membrane.

The wall of urinary passages – generally:
A.Tunica mucosa:
   1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – transitional
       epithelium (except urethra),
   2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar collagenous c.t.
       with elastic fibers.
   3. lamina muscularis mucosae
B. Tela submucosa
C. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue.
D. Tunica adventitia.



27. Vesica urinalis
(perpendicular section to the surface of urinary bladder,
HE)


A.    Tunica mucosa – forms irregular folds:
      1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – transitional
            epithelium,
      2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar collagenous c.t.
            with elastic fibers.
B.    Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue, forms 3 not
      distinc layers: inner – plexiform, middle – circular,
      outer - longitudinal.
C.    Tunica adventitia or tunica serosa (according to place
      from which the sample was taken).
28. Ureter
(cross section, HE)


A.   Tunica mucosa – forms longitudinal folds (lumen of
   the ureter is star-shaped):
   1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – transitional
       epithelium,
   2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar collagenous c.t.
       with elastic fibers.
B. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue: 2 (3) layers:
   inner - longitudinal, middle - circular , outer (only in
   lower 1/3) - longitudinal.
C. Tunica adventitia – loose c.t. with vessels and nrves.




29. Testis
(Hematoxyline-eosin /HE/ or - safron /HES/)


A.  Connective tissue (c.t.):
   1. tunica albuginea testis – dense c.t. membrane on the
       surface of testicles – is fused with epiorchium and
       thickened into mediastinum testis on dorsal side; it
       contains anastomosing clefts – rete testis (lined with
       aimple squamous or cuboidal epithelium),
   2. septula testis – taper from mediastinum and divide
       testis incompletely into the lobules,
   3. interstitial c.t. – loose collagenous c.t. among
       seminiferous tubules; this c.t. contains blood and
       lymph vessels, nerves and Leydig cells; Leydig cells are
       oval to polygonal, they have eosinophilic cytoplasm
       and occure single or in groups near the blood
       capillaries.
B. Tubuli seminiferi contorti – in cross and oblique
   sections. Their wall is composed of seminiferous
   epithelium, which contains spermatogenic cells in
   different stage of development and the cells of Sertoliho,
   1. spermatogenic cells:
       – spermiogonia – middle-sized spherical cells with
           finelly dispersed chromatin in the nucleus; they are
           localized in one layer near tunica propria of
           seminiferous tubule,
       – spermiocytes – the largest cells in epithelium,
           spherical or polyhedral, with visible chromosomes
           in the nucleus; they are localized in several layers
           above spermiogonia,
       – prespermatids – spherical cells, smaller than
           spermiocytes, their nucleus is in interphase; the
           cells are near the lumen of tubule,
       – spermatids – the smallest cells with roubnd or
           ovoid nucleus with densely condensed chromatin;
           developing flagellum on luminal side of some cells
           is obviuos,
2.   Sertoli (supporting) cells – are usually covered by
        spermatogenic cells (only nuclei of Sertoli cells can be
        identified in the slides – these are oval, pale, with
        distinct nucleoli; nuclei are found in basal third of
        spermiogenic epithelium),
     3. tunica propria – c.t. (basement membrane, loose
        network of elastic and collagenous fibers and
        fibrocytes).




30. Epididymis
(Hematoxyline-eosin /HE/ or - safron /HES/)


A.  Connective tissue (c.t.):
   1. dense collagenous c.t. forms capsule,
   2. loose collagenous c.t. with numerous vessels among
      spirally convoluted canaliculi.
B. Canal of epididymis:
   1. ductuli efferentes - in caput epididymidis; they have
      irregular-shaped lumen and their wall consists of:
      – lamina epithelialis – low cuboid and tall columnar
          cells occurre in epithelium and some of them are
          ciliated,
      – membrana propria – loose collagenous c.t. with
          circularly oriented smooth muscle cells,
   2. ductus epididymidis - forms corpus et cauda
      epididymidis; cross and oblique sections of duct with
      spermatozooa in the lumen are usually found in the
      slide. The wall of duct is composed of:
      – lamina epithelialis – pseudostratified columnar
          epithelium with stereocilia,
      – membrana propria – see above – the same layer in
          the wall of ductuli efferentes.
31. Funiculus spermaticus
 (Cross section, HE)


Spermatic cord contains loose c.t. and bundle of:
    1. ductus deferens (the largest structure with thick
        wall: mucosa, tunica muscularis, adventitia)
    2. veins of plexus pampiniformis
    3. arteries
    4. nerves
The cord is covered with c.t. capsule and irregularly m.
cremaster (skeletal muscle)




32. Glandula vesiculosa
(Cross section, HE)


A.  Tunica mucosa – numerous anastomosing primary,
   secondary and terciary folds and crypts,
   1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple cuboid to
       pseudostratified columnar epithelium with glandular
       cells,
   2. lamina propria mucosae – loose collagenous c.t.
B. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue arranged into
   2 layers: inner - circular, outer - longitudinal.
C. Tunica adventitia – loose collagenous c.t.




33. Prostata
(Hematoxyline-eosin or Azan)


A.  Connective tissue (c.t.):
   1. capsule – dense c.t. with smooth muscle cells ,
   2. fibromuscular stroma - elastic and collagenous fibers
       and bundles of smooth muscle cells.
B. Glands of prostate - tubular with irregular lumen;
   epithelium projects into the lumen like folds; calcified
   bodies occurre in the lumen of some glands - prostatic
   sand. Glandular wall consists of epithelium and basement
   membrane:
   1. epithelium – simple cuboid to pseudostratified
       columnar with irregular layer of low basal cells (cell
       height depends on secretory phase),
   2. basement membrane – is not distinct in the slides.
34. Penis
(Cross section, HE)


A.   Skin – very thin, contains sweet and sebaceous glands,
   loose subcutaneous c.t. without fat cells.
B. Corpora cavernosa:
   1. Corpus cavernosum penis (paired):
       – tunica albuginea on the surface – dense
           collagenous c.t.,
       – erectile tissue – venous lacunae lined with
           epithelium, their wall contain collagenous c.t.,
           bundles of smooth muscle cells and elastic fibers,
   2. Corpus spongiosum urethrae (unpaired):
   Similar structure as corpus cavernosum penis; it contains
       pars spongiosa urethrae, which mucosa form
       longitudinal folds (star-shaped lumen):
       – mucosa: stratified columnar epihteiuml with
           endoepithelial mucous glands (lacunae urethrales
           Morgagni); lamina propria – loose collagenous c.t.
           with numerous venous plexuses and tubular
           mucous glands (gll. paraurethrales Littrei),
       – muscle layer – reduced into the irregular bundles,
       – adventitia – loose c.t. which continues into the c.t.
           of corpus spongiosum.
35. Ovarium
(perpendicular section to the surface of ovary, HE or HES)


First note that the ovary has a cortex-medullary
organization and is surrounded by a thick connective tissue
capsule, the tunica albuginea. The surface of the tunica
albuginea is covered with a cuboidal, germinal epithelium.
This slide illustrates all the phases of follicular
development.


A.   Cortex of the ovary (zona corticalis) – highly cellular
   connective tissue (c.t.) is composed of fibrocyte and
   small amount of c.t. fibers. C.t. is condensed into tunica
   albuginea ovarii bellow simple cuboid epithelium,
   which coveres the ovarian surface.
B. Cortex contains ovarian follicles (primary, secondary
   and terciary), „yellow“ and „white“ bodies – corpora
   lutea and corpora albicantia:
   1. primordial follicles – beneath tunica albuginea
       ovarii; they consists of:
       – oocyte – cell, which has 40 to 50 µm in diameter
           (), eosinophilic cytoplasm and pale nucleus
           with basophilic nucleolus,
       – one layer of flattened folicullar cells (surround
           oocyte),
   2. growing follicles - 0,1 to 3 mm ; they are
       localized in deeper parts of cortex; their structure
       depend on the stage of development (primary
       unilaminar follicle, primary multilaminar follicle and
       secondary follicle with small cavities fusing together
       ):
       – oocyte – about 100 µm  with eosinophilic
           cytoplasm, surrounded by zona pellucida,
       – follicular cells – are arranged into several layers
           around the oocyte, cells have polyhedral shape
           except the cells in basal layer attached to
           basement membrane – these cells are cuboid or
           low columnar,
       – theca folliculi – c.t. coat with oval fibroblast
           circularly arranged,
   3. mature Graafian follicles - they have cavity
       (antrum folliculi), 4 mm to 1,5 cm :
       – oocyte – 150 µm , eosinophilic cytoplasm,
           excentrically situated nucleus, zona pellucida,
       – follicular cells – in several layer form membrana
           granulosa, which lines antrum folliculi, bump-
           like projection of membrana granulosa contains
           oocyte and is called cumulus oophorus,
       – theca folliculi – by membrane of Slavjanski is
           separated from membrana granulosa and
           divides into: theca folliculi interna and theca
           folliculi externa,
   4. corpus luteum (sg.) – see description of the
following slide,
     5. corpora albicantia (pl.) – they have different
      shape and size and are made up of hyalinized c.t.
C. Medulla of the ovary (zona vasculosa) – dense c.t.
   with spiral blood vessels, lymph vessels and nerves.




Corpus luteum (CL)
(Hematoxyline - eosin)


A.  C.t. of CL – capsule and fine septa, penetrating into
   the parenchyma of CL; c.t. fills the center of CL
   (original antrum folliculi).
B. Parenchyma of CL:
   1. lutein cells – the main cell type, cells are large,
       pale, polyhedral and organized into frilling strip;
       there are numerous blood sinusoids among the
       cells,
   2. thecal cells - 2 - 3 times smaller than lutein cells,
       they are present at the periphery of CL and
       sporadically penetrate the folds with lutein cells;
       blood sinusoids are also present among the cells.



36. Tuba uterina (2 x) - pars ampullaris
and pars isthmica
(cross section, HE or HES)


A.   Tunica mucosa:
   1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple columnar
       epithelium, composed of ciliated cells (CC) and
       secretory cells (SC),
   2. lamina propria mucosae – loose c.t.
B. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle cells (circular and
   longitudinal layer).
C. Tunica serosa – simple squamous epithelium
   (mesothelium) + thin layer of loose c.t.; subserous c.t.
   with ovarian and uterine vessels is between serosa and
   tunica muscularis.

AMPULLA
   Epithelium - primary, secondary and terciary folds,
   which fill the lumen,
abundant ciliated cells [CC > SC]
  External Muscle coat / layer - thin irregular
^Pars Ampullaris

                   37. Isthmus
                      Epithelium - sporadic simple longitudinal folds,
                    -abundant secretory cells [SC > CC]




^Pars Isthmica



                   38. Uterus - prolipherative
                   phase
                   (perpendicular section to the surface of mucosa, HE)


                   A.  Endometrium (tunica mucosa) – thickeness 2 - 3 mm,
                      divides into zona functionalis (with bodies and
                      openings of uterine glands) and zona basalis (close to
                      the myometrium – contains bases of glands). Consists
                      of:
                      1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple columnar
                          epithelium,
                      2. lamina propria mucosae – is composed of star
                          shaped or polygonal fibrocytes and minimum of c.t.
                          fibers; it is highly vascularized and contains simple
                          tubular glands - glandulae uterinae, lined with
                          simple columnar epithelium.
                   B. Myometrium (tunica muscularis) – thick layer of
                      bundles of smooth muscle cells spiraly organized.
C. Parametrium – loose c.t. with blood vessels and
  nerves between myometrium and perimetrium.
D. Perimetrium (tunica serosa) – simple squamous
  epithelium (mesothelium) + thin layer of loose c.t. .




39. Uterus – secretory phase
(perpendicular section to the surface of mucosa, HE)


A.     Endometrium (tunica mucosa) – thickness 6 – 7 mm;
     zona functionalis is divided into pars compacta
     (surface layer with glandular ducts and high amount of
     c.t.) and pars spongiosa (contains dilated bodies of
     glands and only small amount of c.t.), zona basalis –
     does not change during mestrual cycle.
     Structure of the endometrium:
     1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple columnar
          epithelium,
     2. lamina propria mucosae – fibrocyte are enlarged,
          round, without cytoplasmic processes, dense
          network of blood capillaries; bodies of glandulae
          uterinae are dilated and have an typical
          appearance.
     (B., C. a D. – see Uterus - prolipherative phase)
40. Vagina
(Hematoxylin-eosin or Best´s carmine)


A.  Tunica mucosa – forms transversal folds - rugae:
   1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – stratified squamous
      epithelium, its surface cells contain glycogen (they
      are pale in HE slides – because glycogen granules
      are dissolved),
   2. lamina propria mucosae – loose collagenous c.t.
      with elastic fibers and venous plexuses, lamina
      propria forms papillae.
B. Tunica muscularis – bundles of smooth muscle tissue
   runing in circular, longitudinal and oblique direction.
C. Tunica adventitia – dense c.t. of cavum pelvis
   subperitoneale.




41. Labium minus
(cross section, HE)

Labium is skin fold;
     1. epidermis – stratified squamous epithelium with
          signs of keratinization,
     2. dermis – connective tissue axis with nerve fibers
          and Meissner bodies in subepithelial papillae, a
          sebaceous glands, which duct are opened on the
          epidermal surface of labium; c.t. does not
          contain any fat cells.
42. Hypophysis Cerebri
A.  Connective tissue (c.t.):
   1. thin c.t. capsule and septa with blood vessels
      and nerves,
   2. network of reticular fibers (they separate
      glandular cells and blood sinusoids).
B. Parenchyma of hypophysis:
   1. anterior lobe (adenohypophysis) – divides into
      pars distalis, pars tuberalis and pars intermedia:
      – pars distalis and tuberalis consist of cords
          and groups of glandular cells, which are
          divided according amount of granules and
          staining:
              chromophobe cells – light cytoplasm,
              small amount of granules,
              acidophil cells – numerous granules stains
              in red color,
              basophil cells – numerous granules stains
              in violet color,
      – pars intermedia – contains follicles (usually
          with colloid), basophilic and chromophobe
          cells predominate in cords,
   2. posterior lobe (neurohypophysis) – is
      connected by infundibulum with hypothalamus
      (infundibulum is not usually present in the
      slides); structure of posterior lobe:
      – pituicytes – irregular-shaped cells with
          numerous processes,
      – unmyelinized nerve fibers (tractus
          hypothalamohypophyseus).
43. Epiphysis Cerebri
A.  Connective tissue:
   1. thin c.t. capsule (pia mater) and fine septa s
      with blood vessels,
   2. loose interstitial c.t. with blood sinusoids.
B. Parenchyma of epiphysis:
   1. cords and groups of 2 types of cells –
      pinealocytes and neuroglial cells,
   2. unmyelinized nerve fibers,
   3. acervulus cerebri – intensly stained calcified
      corpuscles (brain sand) of irregular shape.
44. Glandula Thyroidea
A.  Connective tissue:
   1. capsule from dense collagenous c.t. with blood
      and lymph vesels and nerves,
   2. c.t. septa – are distinct and separate gland into
      the lobules,
   3. interstitial c.t. – loose c.t. with net of capillaris,
      around follicles.
B. Lobules – consist of follicles lined with epithelium
   and containing colloid:
   1. epithelium in follicle – simple, its high depends
      on functional stage and size of follicle; it is
      composed of follicular and parafollicular cells
      (parafollicular cells can be idetified only with
      using of special staining methods),
   2. colloid – fills cavity of each follicle, it has
      homogenous appearance and is usually stained
      with acid dyes.




45. Glandula Parathyroidea
A.  Connective tissue:
   1. thin c.t. capsule and septa with blood vessels
      and nerves,
   2. net of reticular fibers (separate glandular cells
      and blood capillaries).
B. Parenchyma – cords and groups of glandular cells:
   1. chief cells – predominate, with light basophilic
      cytoplasm,
   2. oxyphil cells – with intensly eosinophilic
      cytoplasm (they are lined in older slides, its result
      of discoloration) – they occure after 10th year of
      age.
46. Glandula Suprarenalis
A.  Connective tissue:
   1. dense c.t. capsule and thin radial septa with
      blood vessels,
   2. net of reticular fibers around cords of glandular
      cells and blood sinusoids.
B. Parenchyma - 9/10 form cortex, the rest represents
   medulla:
   1. cortex:
      – zona glomerulosa – bellow c.t. capsule, cell
          cords are coiled like glomerule, cell cytoplasm
          is basophilic,
      – zona fasciculata – middle, the most
          voluminous layer with paralelly oriented cell
          cords (perpendicularly to the capsule); cells
          are large, vakuolized (spongiocytes),
      – zona reticularis – cell cords anastomose and
          form network (reticulum); cells are small,
          eosinophilic and contain granules of
          lipofuscin,
   2. medulla:
      – cords and groups of chromaffine cells with
          finely granular, basophilic cytoplasm,
      – nerve fibers and solitary ganglionic cells.
47. Thymus
The thymus is a highly lobulated organ
invested by a loose collagenous capsule, C,
from which short interlobular septa, S, containing
blood vessels radiate into the
substance of the organ.
The thymic tissue is divided into two distinct
zones, a deeply basophilic outer cortex,
Cx, and an inner eosinophilic medulla,
M; distinction between the two zones is most
marked in early
childhood as is represented in this specimen.

 -    is usually most active in teenagers and
      shrinks in adulthood. The process of thymus
      transformation during aging is called
      involution.

 -    Cortex (outer regions) and medulla (inner
      regions) are distinguished in parenchym.

 -    Parenchym is composed of cytoreticulum
      (stelate epithelial cells forming network) and
      T-lymphocytes. Cytoreticulum originates
      from endoderm of pharyngeal pouches and
      cytokeratin (protein typical for epithelial
      cells) can be detected in the cytoplasm of its
      cells.

 -     Thymus is composed of 2 lobes covered with
       capsule (dense irregular connective tissue),
       septa running from capsule into parenchym
       separate it into lobules. Lobules contains
       only cortex.
Cortex: cytoreticulum (        ) + lymphocytes (95
%), blood capillaries with thick wall covered with
cytoplasmic processes of cytoreticulum cells =
„thymus-blood barrier“
Medulla: cytoreticulum + small amount of
lymphocytes (5 %), Hassal´s corpuscles (      )–
arrise by aggregation of cytoreticulum cells, which
degenerate in the center of body (       ).
Young thymus:
The cortex, Cx, is packed with lymphocytes,
accounting for its basophilia, whereas the medulla,
M, contains fewer lymphocytes. In the center of
the medulla are eosinophilic, lamellated structures
known as Hassall’s corpuscles, H, representing
degenerate epithelial reticular cells. well
distinguished cortex and medulla.
48. Arteries and veins
The wall of arteries and veins of large or medium
caliber have three tunics: tunica intima (interna),
tunica media, and tunica adventitia (externa).
          General structure of tunics
     - tunica intima – the endothelial lining with
          its basal lamina and subendothelial layer
          with longitudinally oriented elastic fibers
     - tunica media
          – in artery more then in veins: spiraly and
          circularly oriented connective tissue fibers
          organized into elastic fenestrated
          membranes and smooth muscle cells, the
          ratio of smooth muscle cells and elastic
          membranes depends on the type of blood
          artery
     - tunica adventitia – contains collagen and
          elastic fibers, scattered fibroblasts.
          – in vein more then in arteries:
          longitudinally oriented bundles of smooth
          muscle cells, serrounded with connective
          tissue
The tunica adventitia contains small blood vessels
(vasa vasorum), which supply nutrients to tissues
in the outer one-half of the wall of the blood
vessel. Small nerves (nervi vasorum), representing
fibers of the autonomic nervous system, are also
present in the tunica adventitia and they innervate
the smooth muscle of the vessel. Elastic laminae –
inner and outer – separate tunics in the vessel
wall. These laminae (membrana elastica interna et
externa) are made up of elastic fibers. Inner
membrane separates intima from media and outer
one separate media from adentitia. Outer
membrane is not usually distinct in all veins and
small arteries.
49. Aorta
Large arteries = Elastic arteries (examples: aorta
and and pulmonary arteries, the immediate
branches of these arteries are also considered to
be elastic arteries – brachiocephalic, common
carotids, etc.). have sheets of elastic tissue in their
walls and are the largest diameter arteries. They
are subjected to high systolic pressures. These
large vessels are also adapted to smooth out the
surges in blood flow since blood only flows
through them during systole. The elastic tissue in
their tunic media provides the resilience to smooth
out this pressure wave.

The tunica intima is relatively thick and consists of
an endothelial layer with its basal lamina, a
subendothelial layer of connective tissue and an
internal elastic membrane. The internal elastic
membrane is not as conspicuous because it is one
of the many elastic membranes in the wall of the
arteries. It is usually only identified because it is
the innermost of the elastic layers of the arterial
wall.
The tunica media is the thickest of the three
layers. The numerous, thick, fenestrated elastic
membranes are the predominant substance of the
media. They are interconnected by fine elastic
fibers and also by smooth muscle cells, which
spirals at a slight angle to the transverse axis of the
vessel. The smooth muscle cells is surrounded by
reticular fibers and a few collagenous fibers.
 In elastic arteries, the tunica adventitia is
relatively thin – half the thickness of the media –
and contains collagen fibers, elastic fibers and
connective tissue cells (fibroblasts and
macrophages). The tunica adventitia contains
blood vessels (vasa vasorum) and nerves (nervi
vasorum) that supply the blood vessel wall.
50. Large veins
(examples: vena cava, subclavian veins)
In large veins, the tunica media is relatively thin
and consists of an endothelial lining with its basal
lamina, a small amount of subendothelial tissue
and some smooth muscle cells. Thin tunica media
contains sparse, circularly arranged smooth
muscle. Also present are collagen fibers and some
fibroblasts. The most obvious feature is the
thickness of the tunica adventitia. In large veins,
large bundles of longitudinal disposed smooth
muscle cells are found with the usual collagen and
elastic fibers.

Vena cava (HE)                                   tunica
interna is not distinct in this small magnification

SM = smooth muscle bundles of adventitia
TA = tunica adventitia
TM = tunica media
vv = vasa vasorum




52. Lymph Node
 -      capsula fibrosa + septa = irregular dense
        connective tissue; several afferent lymphatic
        vessels (opened into lymphatic sinus below
        the capsule = sinus subcapsularis) and 1-2
        efferent vessels (from hillus of node)
  - parenchym = consists of peripheral cortex
        and central medulla, and paracortical zone
        (between cortex and medulla)
  Cortex: reticular connctive tissue + B-
  lymphocytes organized into lymphatic nodule
  (follicles), some of them are active with light
  germinative center.
  Paracortical zone: reticular connctive tissue +
  T-lymphocytes and macrophages
  Medulla: reticular connctive tissue + B-
  lymphocytes organized int cords
  - lymphatic sinuses – sinus subcapsularis 
        sinus corticalis (perifollicularis)  sinus
        medullaris
The wall of sinuses is lined with reticular cells
(called litoral cells) and macrophages, reticular
fibers network substitutes missing basal lamina

1. The subcapsular sinus of lymph node: (E) –
reticular cells lining on both the capsule (Caps) side
and nodule (CN) side of the sinus (SCS). Present
within the sinus are lymphocytes (Ly); dendritic,
antigen-presenting cells (DRC) and macrophages
(Mph). 2. Macrophages in the wall of sinus
             phagocyting colored material.

             Lymph Node Capsule Details: As the lymph slowly
             flows through the maze of cells antigens are
             processed and lymphocytes become activat

             Subcapsular Sinus Cells: Dendritic cells and
             macrophages act as antigen presenters. Specific
             Lymphocytes are activated by a presented antigen
             for a specific invader.

             .



             53. Lien (spleen)
             Structure:
                 1. connective tissue capsule (capsula
                      fibrosa) consists of dense irregular c.t.
                      and is covered with simple squamous
                      epithelium. Septa entering splenic
                      parenchym are calle trabecules and are
                      derivatives if capsule.

                 2.    parenchym = pulp:
                       - white pulp: is a typical lymphatic tissue
                       with lymphocytes in reticular c.t.,
capsule                lymphocytes are located around central
                       arteris forming so called periarterial
                       lymphatic sheath (PALS), this sheaths is
                       sometimes extended into lymphatic
                       nodules (follicle) = bodies of Malpighi.
                       PALS contains T-lymphocytes, in nodules
                       and on the periphery of PALS B-
                       lymphocytes and macrophages and
                       dendritic cells are present. Periphery of
                       PALS and nodules is called marginal zone
                       and contains also many blood sinuses.
                       - red pulp: is composed of reticular c.t.
                       with different cell types around sinuses.
                       Free cells are macrophages, lymphocytes,
Red pulp               granulocytes and mainly erythrocytes.
                       Reticular c.t. with cells form cords of
                       Billroth and these cords surrounds venous
                       sinuses.
                  3. Blood circulation:
             A. lienalis entres the splenic hilus  its branches
             pass through the trabecules as aa. trabeculares 
             when they leave the trabecules, they are called aa.
             centrales and are followed by lymphatic tissue
             (PALS + boides of Malpighi)  these arteries are
             branched at the end into arteriolae penicilatae:
             eache arteriole has 3 parts:
             1. arteriole of pulp (medullary arteriole),
White pulp
             2. encapsulated arteriole (surrounded by
phagocyting reticular cells – capsule) and
      3. precapillary which opens into  venous sinuses
      in red pulp  near the trabecules, blood from
      sinuses is collected into vv. trabeculares which
      fuse into v. lienalis.




54. Skin from top of finger
Keratinization is in layers
No glands
Nails
No hair
Merkel´s cells

600-800 µm for the thick skin/




55. Skin from axilla
varies between 75 and
150 µm for the thin skin

Little keratinazation
Adipose tissue
Glands
Hair
56. Skin with hair
Keratinzed
Hair follicles
Hair




57. Nail
58. Nonlactating mammary
glands
glandular tissue is reduced on only duct system, e.g.
lactiferous ducts,
terminal interlobular ducts and intralobular ducts

an area of one interlobular duct is a lobule
the lobules are separated by a denser, less cellular interlobular
connective tissue

spaces within lobules are filled with loose intralobular tissue
abundant in cells.




59. Lactating mammary glands
glandular tissue is fully differentiated
by thin connective tissue septa, the glandular parenchyma is
divided into the lobules

lobules contains spherical to elongated acini (alveoli)
differ in size
the wall of acini consist of
- the basement membrane
- cuboidal or columnar secretory cells and
- myoepithelial cells located between the basement membrane
and bases of
secretory cells/ducts
a) intralobular ducts lined by a simple cuboidal to columnar
epithelium
b) lactiferous ducts lined by two layers of columnar cells which,
in the lactiferous sinus, changes into stratified squamous
epithelium

    •    the first secretion appearing after birth is called the
         colostrum
    •    it contains less fat and more protein than regular milk
         and is rich in antibodies
60. Cortex cerebri
(perpendicular section to the surface of brain, HE or
impregnation)

A.  Pia mater cerebri – thin c.t. membrane with numerous blood
   vessels.
B. Brain cortex (neocortex) = gray matter – consists of 6 layers
   (not distinctly separated), which are distinguished according
   to prevailing type of neurons:
   1. lamina molecularis (lamina zonalis):
       – small multipolar neurons with horizontaly oriented
           processes (cells of Cajal) – in deeper parts of this layer,
       – nuclei of plasmatic astrocytes – in upper part of the
           layer – their cytoplasmic processes form together
           membrana limitans gliae superficialis,
   2. lamina granularis externa – small polyhedral and
       pyramidal neurons,
   3. lamina pyramidalis (lamina pyramidalis externa) –
       middle-sized pyramidal neurons (the apexes of pyramids
       are oriented to the surface of gyrus) + cells of Martinotti,
   4. lamina granularis interna – the same structure as the
       second layer,
   5. lamina ganglionaris (lamina pyramidalis interna) - large
       pyramidal cells; their cytoplasmic processes are better
       visualized in impregnated slides,
   6. lamina multiformis – spindle-shaped neurons and
       numerous cells of Martinotti.
C. White matter – bellow the 6th layer of cortex, is composed
   of radially arranged nerve fibers.



61. Cerebellum
(Hematoxyline-eosin, Nissl or impregnation)

A.  Pia mater cerebelli – c.t. membrane with numerous blood
   vessels.
B. Cortex cerebelli:
   1. stratum cinereum (stratum moleculare) - due to small
      amount of neurons this layer is pale in HE and Nissl slides,
      impregnated slide shows richly branched dendrites of
      Purkinje cells and neurites of basket cells (they are
      oriented paralelly with surface of gyrus and send
      collaterals to the bodies of Purkinje cells),
   2. stratum gangliosum (vrstva Purkyňových buněk): pear-
      shaped bodies of Purkinje cells with light nucleus and
      distinct nucleolus, Nissl substance is present in the
      cytoplasm of bodies and dendrites (see slides stained
      according to Nissl) + nuclei of macroglia – modified
      plasmaticé astrocytes,
   3. stratum granulosum:
      – small (4 - 6 µm) and middle-sized multipolar neurons
          and their processes,
      – glomeruli cerebellares – small eosinophilic corpuscles
          (correspond to synapses between mossy fibers and
          dendrites of neurons in granular layer).
C.    White matter of small brain – forms axis of cerebellar gyri
     and is made up of myelinized fibers.

62. Medulla spinalis
(cross section, HE)

A.   Pia mater – thin c.t. membrane with numerous blood
   vessels, which trench fissura mediana anterior.
B. Gray matter – has H shape in cross section, central canal
   lined with ependyma is in the middle of cross commisure.
   Gray matter divides into:
   1. ventral horns (columns) – at the side of fissura mediana
       anterior, they are wide and rounded and do not reach the
       surface of spinal cord; ventral horns contain 3 types of
       neurons:
       – large motor neurons (anterior horn cells) – star-shaped
           or polyhedral cells, sized about 150 µm, cells are
           localized in groups (motor nuclei),
       – small neurons of horn – diffused in horns,
       – interneurony,
   2. lateral horns (columns) – only in thoracic part of spinal
       cord, contain 2 types of neurons: small and middle-sized
       multipolar neurons and interneurons,
   3. dorsal horns (columns) – at the side of septum
       medianum dorsale, horns are slim and reach practically
       the surface of spinal cord; they contains neurons of 2
       types:
       – neurons of funiculi (cellulae funiculares) – middle-sized
           multipolar neurons,
       – interneurons.
C. White matter of spinal cord: is divided into 3 funiculi on
   both sides - anterior, lateral and posterior, they are composed
   of myelinized nerve fibers and oligodendroglia.


63. Ganglion spinale
(parallel section with long axis of ganglion, HE or impregnation)

A.  Connective tissue:
   1. dense c.t. capsule,
   2. septa with blood vessels
   3. loose c.t. around ganglionic cells.
B. Ganglionic cells – are in groups, usually bellow c.t. capsule:
   1. ganglionic cells – round or oval pseudounipolar neurons
      with light vesicular nucleus and granules of lipofuscin in
      cytoplazm,
   2. satelite cells (amficytes) – spindle-shaped cells with dark
      nuclei, cells form continouous coat around each ganlionic
      cell
C. Bundles of nerve fibers with myelin sheath run throughout
   middle zone of ganglion.
64. Peripheral nerve
(Cross or longitudinal section, HE, luxol blue - myelin,
impregnation)
Peripheral nerve – cross section
A. Nerve c.t. coats:
   1. epineurium – surface nerve coat consists of loose c.t.,
   2. perineurium – surounds each secondary nerve bundle
       and is made up one to several layers of special flattened
       cells and collagenous fibers,
   3. endoneurium – loose c.t. on the surface of each primary
       nerve bundle and around each nerve fiber.
B. Nerve fibers: most of them are surounded by myelin and
   Schwann sheaths; in cross section they appear as small circles
   with dark centres (axons); nuclei of Schwann cells are usually
   distinct.

Peripheral nerve – longitudinal section
A. Nerve c.t. coats: see above
B. Nerve fibers: fibers are wavy and nuclei of Schwann cells can
   be identified on their surface; nodes of Ranvier can be found
   on slides stained with luxol blue.
65. Anterior segment of the
eye
A.     Cornea:
     1. anterior epithelium – stratified squamous
          epithelium,
     2. Bowman´s membrane – 6-9 µm thick membrane
          of homogenous appearance,
     3. substantia propria – is composed of collagenous
          lamelae oriented in paralel way with the surface,
          amorpheous substance and flattened fibrocytes,
     4. Descemet´s membrane – basal lamina of
          posterior epithelium of corneae,
     5. posterior epithelium (endothelium) – simple
          squamous epithelium of mesenchymal origin.
B.     Sclerocorneal junction - contains sinus venosus
     (canal of Schlemm).
C.     Corpus ciliare – is triangular in section, processus
     ciliares are prominent on its free surface:
     1. connective tissue stroma – highly vascularized,
          around musculus ciliaris, which is composed of
          bundles of smooth muscle cells oriented in
          meridional, radial and circular direction,
     2. pars ciliaris retinae – 2 layers of epithelial cells:
          – outer layer with pigment cells – continuation of
               stratum pigmenti retinae,
          – inner layer with columnar cells without
               pigment – is atteched to the membrana
               limitans interna.
D.     Iiris - thin c.t. plate with pupilla in the center,
     situated between anterior and posterior chamber of
     the eye. Laeyers of iris:
     1. anterior epithelium – endothelium (is dificult to
          identify it in the slide),
     2. anterior limiting (stromal) sheath – condensed
          c.t. and pigment cells,
     3. stroma iridis – yelly-like c.t. with melanocytes
          and blood vessels, smooth muscle is near pupilla
          (musculus sphincter pupillae),
     4. posterior limiting sheath – is very thin, composed
          of myoepithelial cells, forming musculus dilatator
          pupillae,
     5. posterior epithelium = pars iridica retinae – layer
          of columnar highly pigmented cells – continuation
          of pars ciliaris retinae
E.     Lens (lens cristallina) – (can be missing in some
     slides):
     1. capsula lentis – homogenous membrane on lens
          surface,
     2. anterior epithelium – cuboid epithelium between
          capsule ventral side of lens,
     3. lens fibers – the most important part of lens.
66. Posterior segment of
the eye
(Meridional section, HE)

A.  Sclera: contains thick bundles of collagenous fibers,
   oriented paralelly with surface of eyeball, network of
   elastic fibers and elongated fibroblasts.
B. Chorioidea:
   1. lamina suprachorioidea – thin, avascular layer
       with lamellar structure, numerous melanocytes
   2. lamina vasculosa – loose c.t. with blood arteries
       and veins; pigmented cells,
   3. lamina choriocapillaris – one layer of capillary
       network, without melanocytes,
   4. lamina vitrea (Bruch´s membrane) – not distinc
       layer, separates choroid and retina.
C. Photoreceptive part of retina (pars optica retinae):
   1. pigment epithelium (stratum pigmenti retinae) –
       layer of cuboid cells with pigment melanin ,
   2. layer of rods and cones – outer segments of
       photoreceptors,
   3. membrana limitans externa – not distinct,
   4. outer nuclear layer – nuclei of rods and cons,
   5. outer plexiform layer – synapses between 1st
       and 2nd neuron,
   6. inner nuclear layer – bipolar, amacrine and
       horizontal cells and nuclei of supporting neuroglial
       cells of Müller,
   7. inner plexiform layer – synapses between 2nd
       and 3rd neuron) + branching of amacrine cell
       processes,
   8. ganglion cells layer – multipolar neurons,
   9. layer of nerve fibers – neurits of multipolar cells,
       blood vessels supplying retina,
   10. membrana limitans interna.



67. Palpebra
(cross section, HE or HES)

A.   Ventral side: skin covered with thin epidermis, hair
   follicles, sweat and sebaceous glands in dermis.
B. M. orbicularis oculi – skeletal muscle.
C. Tarsal plate: dense c.t. with branched sebaceous
   glands (gll. tarseae Meibomi).
D. Dorsal side: conjunctive (stratified columnar
   epithelium with goblet cells + lamina propria mucosae
   – loose c.t. with lymph nodules).
Notice: free margin of palpebra contains hair follicles of
eyelashes (cilia) with sebaceous glands of Zeiss and
apocrine sweat glands of Moll.
68. Auricle
Ec = elastic cartilage
* = typical thick skin with hair follicles and sebaceous
glands




69. Funiculus umbilicalis
(cross section, HE or Azan)


A.  Amnionic ectoderm – simple squamous or cuboid
   epithelium on the surface of umbilical cord.
B. Wharton´s yelly (yelly-like c.t. tissue) – is composed
   of amorpheous substance, fibrocytes and fine
   collagenous fibers.
C. Umbilical vessels (vasa umbilicalia):
   1. arteriae umbilicales – are 2; narrow lumen,
       circular, longitudinal and spiral smooth muscle
       cells in the wall, inner and outer elastic
       membranes are not present,
   2. vena umbilicalis – is 1; greater lumen, thiner wall,
       distinct 3 layers.
D. The rest of ductus allantoideus (allantois) – non-
   constant epithelial islet in the center of triangular
   region of c.t. among umbilical vessels.




70. Placenta –the end of pregnancy
(cross section, HE)


A.    Pars fetalis placentae:
     1. chorionic plate (membrane) - yelly-like c.t. tissue:
        – amnionic side of plate – smooth, covered with
            amnionic ectoderm (simple squamous or
            cuboid epithelium),
        – hypochorial side of plate - forms chorionic villi,
     2. chorionic villi (villi choriales) and intervilous
        space. Structure of the villus:
        – syncytiotrophoblast, thin cytoplasmic layer
with many nuclei and without cell borders,
       – stroma of villus – yelly-like c.t. tissue with
         branches of umbilical vessels.

B.   Pars materna placentae (basal plate) = zona
   functionalis of initial decidua basalis:
   1. decidual cells – ovoid to polyhedral cells with
       eosinophilic cytoplasm,
   2. cells of cytotrophoblast – surface layer of basal
       plate.
C. Fibrinoid – homogenous or finely granular
   eosinophilic material on the surface of basal plate,
   chorionic villi or hypochorial side of chorionic plate.
Slide References:

1.       http://www.iupui.edu/~anatd502/Labs.f04/digestive%20I%20lab/Digestive%20System%20I%20Lab.html

2.         http://ouhsc.edu/histology/Text%20Sections/Muscle.html

3.         http://www.meddean.luc.edu/lumen/meded/histo/frames/h_fram13.html

4.         http://medcell.med.yale.edu/histology/gi2/lingual_salivary_glands.php

5.      http://flylib.com/books/en/2.953.1.21/1/ http://histology-
world.com/photoalbum//displayimage.php?pid=4208

6.         https://courses.stu.qmul.ac.uk/smd/kb/microanatomy/sdentists/ob2/16.htm

http://ellephantie.tumblr.com/post/142262470/type-study-5

7.         http://microanatomy.net/digestive/tooth.htm

8.         http://dentistry.ouhsc.edu/oral-histology/Chapter9/Chap9.html

9.         http://dentistry.ouhsc.edu/oral-histology/Chapter9/Chap9.html

10.        http://dentistry.ouhsc.edu/oral-histology/Chapter9/Chap9.html

11.        http://www.bu.edu/histology/p/10801ooa.htm

12.        http://www.ouhsc.edu/histology/text%20sections/upper%20gi.html

13.        http://www.ouhsc.edu/histology/text%20sections/upper%20gi.html

14.        http://www.kumc.edu/instruction/medicine/anatomy/histoweb/gitract/gi12.htm

15.        http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_6/Slide_94_duodenum/index.htm

16.        http://www.deltagen.com/target/histologyatlas/atlas_files/digestive/jejunum_20x.htm

17.        http://www.kumc.edu/instruction/medicine/anatomy/histoweb/gitract/gi19.htm

18.        http://pathology.mc.duke.edu/research/PTH225.html

19.        http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_7/Slide_106_gallbladder/index.htm

20.        http://anatomytopics.wordpress.com/2008/12/22/anatomy-histo-embryology-liver-gall-bladder-bile-
ducts/

21.        http://ouhsc.edu/histology/Text%20Sections/Cartilage.HTML

22.        http://histology-world.com/photoalbum/displayimage.php?album=53&pid=4693#top_display_media

23.        http://www.kumc.edu/instruction/medicine/anatomy/histoweb/resp/resp04.htm

24.        http://www.siumed.edu/~dking2/crr/CR005b.htm

http://www.histology-world.com/photoalbum/displayimage.php?album=31&pid=2433#top_display_media

25.        http://www.histology-world.com/photoalbum/thumbnails.php?album=15&page=3
26.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_8/Slide_107_kidney/index.htm

27.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_8/Slide_109_bladder/index.htm

28.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_8/index.htm

http://www.kumc.edu/instruction/medicine/anatomy/histoweb/urinary/renal15.htm

29.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_8/Slide_113_testis1/index.htm

30.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_8/index.htm

31.    http://www.ouhsc.edu/histology/text%20sections/male%20reproductive.html

32.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_8/Slide_116_seminal_vesicle/index.htm

33.    http://www.ouhsc.edu/histology/

34.    http://microanatomy.net/Male_Reproductive/testis_and_ducts.htm

35.    http://www.ouhsc.edu/histology/

36.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_9/Slide_123_oviduct/index.htm

38.    http://radiology.uchc.edu/eAtlas/GYN/1970.htm

http://www.kumc.edu/instruction/medicine/anatomy/histoweb/female/female14.htm

39.    https://courses.stu.qmul.ac.uk/smd/kb/microanatomy/humandev/18.htm

40.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_9/Slide_129_vagina/pages/b.8.129.1.2.htm

41.
       http://books.google.cz/books?id=iuJ3mG85LSAC&pg=PA324&lpg=PA324&dq=minor+labia+histology
&source=bl&ots=9cuv7j7kVn&sig=Wh0xO9pXaDWIR4QgRHjBV8sSVoo&hl=cs&ei=Jx2DTpvhNcTKhAf5-
7mXDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CD8Q6AEwAw#v=onepage&q&f=false

42.    http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_7/Slide_134_pituitary/index.htm

43.     http://www.histology-
world.com/photoalbum/displayimage.php?album=73&pid=3040#top_display_media

44.    http://histology-world.com/photoalbum//displayimage.php?pid=3016

45.     http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-
bank/chapter_7/Slides_135_and_136_thyroid_and_parathyroid/index.htm

46.    http://www.indstate.edu/thcme/mmmoga/histology/slide55.html

48.     http://stephsap.blogspot.com/2011/02/cardiovascular-system-processes.html

49.    http://www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/corepages/vascular/vascular.htm

50.     http://meded.ucsd.edu/hist-img-bank/chapter_3/Slides_56_and_57_aorta/index.htm

51.    http://bcrc.bio.umass.edu/histology/?q=image/tid/8&page=1
52.      http://histology-world.com/photoalbum//displayimage.php?pid=1997

53.      http://www.courseweb.uottawa.ca/medicine-
histology/english/cardiovascular/histologybloodvessels.htm

54.      http://medsci.indiana.edu/c602web/602/c602web/lymphnd/slide84.htm

55.      http://histology-world.com/photoalbum/displayimage.php?album=25&pid=1518

56.     http://medcell.med.yale.edu/histology/immune/spleen_red_pulp.php

57.     http://anatomytopics.wordpress.com/category/abdomen/

58.     http://histology-world.com/photoalbum//displayimage.php?pid=2703

59.
        http://www.wesapiens.org/life_sciences/?category=base%2Flife_sciences%2Fhuman_and_animal_hi
stology%2Forgans_and_systems%2Fintequmentary_system%2F&advanced=1

60.      http://neuromedia.neurobio.ucla.edu/campbell/skin/wp.htm

61.     http://www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/corepages/connective/connect.htm

62.     http://www.wesapiens.org/file/1151058/Structure+of+the+human+lactating+mammary+glands

63.      http://neuromedia.neurobio.ucla.edu/campbell/nervous/wp.htm

64.
         http://www.google.com/imgres?q=cerebellum+slide&um=1&hl=en&client=safari&sa=N&rls=en&biw
=1280&bih=630&tbm=isch&tbnid=P6HSDCjgQsSGiM:&imgrefurl=http://neuromedia.neurobio.ucla.edu/camp
bell/nervous/wp.htm&docid=66QqFb4xp5LZEM&w=640&h=480&ei=nguDToiNIpD5sgayibWADg&zoom=1&iac
t=hc&vpx=179&vpy=321&dur=446&hovh=120&hovw=160&tx=118&ty=101&page=1&tbnh=120&tbnw=160&s
tart=0&ndsp=18&ved=1t:429,r:6,s:0

65.
        http://www.google.com/imgres?q=medulla+spinalis+slide&um=1&hl=en&client=safari&sa=N&rls=en
&biw=1280&bih=630&tbm=isch&tbnid=1eMDxNhvPdcynM:&imgrefurl=http://zuzolandia.pl/cross-section-of-
the-mammalian-spinal-
cord%26page%3D6&docid=kheVZvfFL3XewM&itg=1&w=200&h=154&ei=RQyDToWLEIXLtAafjdGdDg&zoom=1
&iact=hc&vpx=740&vpy=237&dur=3&hovh=123&hovw=160&tx=64&ty=55&page=8&tbnh=123&tbnw=160&st
art=142&ndsp=20&ved=1t:429,r:10,s:142

66.      http://missinglink.ucsf.edu/lm/IDS_101_histo_resource/nerves_muscle.html

67.      http://cmdi.medicine.dal.ca/Human_Histology/Lab4/121LH.html

68.      http://histology-world.com/photoalbum/displayimage.php?album=21&pid=2340#top_display_media

69.
        http://www.google.com/imgres?q=sclera+choroid+retina+slide&um=1&hl=en&client=safari&sa=N&rl
s=en&biw=1280&bih=630&tbm=isch&tbnid=Pqy7ziXeZhPHrM:&imgrefurl=http://histology-
world.com/photoalbum//displayimage.php%3Fpid%3D1104&docid=9rzX3UZT4DKGAM&w=400&h=299&ei=F
wSDTuebKs_WsgaQxO21Dg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=668&vpy=149&dur=1069&hovh=194&hovw=260&tx=155
&ty=119&page=1&tbnh=133&tbnw=198&start=0&ndsp=19&ved=1t:429,r:3,s:0
70.
        http://www.google.com/imgres?q=palpebra+slide&um=1&hl=en&client=safari&sa=N&rls=en&biw=1
280&bih=630&tbm=isch&tbnid=a66hHYPKz-
aHnM:&imgrefurl=http://www.iupui.edu/~anatd502/Labs.f04/eye%2520lab/Eye%2520Lab.html&docid=CFNV
73tb8jPV1M&w=212&h=576&ei=AwWDTvDCHs_ysgaPk9CNDg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=611&vpy=154&dur=34
4&hovh=294&hovw=108&tx=70&ty=174&page=3&tbnh=132&tbnw=49&start=36&ndsp=18&ved=1t:429,r:8,s:
36

http://www.google.com/imgres?q=umbilical+cord+slide&um=1&hl=en&client=safari&rls=en&biw=1280&bih=
652&tbm=isch&tbnid=BHtgt5nhG6DnjM:&imgrefurl=http://www.kumc.edu/instruction/medicine/anatomy/hi
stoweb/ct/ct14.htm&docid=bTclbQ1WqHfseM&w=406&h=268&ei=V_-
CTtmxM7H24QSAzfVs&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=367&vpy=158&dur=444&hovh=182&hovw=276&tx=174&ty=98
&page=1&tbnh=140&tbnw=182&start=0&ndsp=16&ved=1t:429,r:1,s:0

71.     http://www.histology-
world.com/photoalbum/displayimage.php?album=86&pid=1445#top_display_media

72.     http://www.histology-
world.com/photoalbum/displayimage.php?album=86&pid=1444#top_display_media
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Histology slide guide

  • 1.
  • 2. Contents: 35. Ovarium, corpus luteum 01. Labium oris (lip) 36. Tuba uterina – ampulla 02. Apex linguae (top of tongue) 37. Tuba uterina – isthmus 03. Papilla circumvallata 38. Uterus – proliferative phase 04. Tonsilla lingualis 39. Uterus – secretory phase 05. Palatum molle 40. Vagina 06. Tonsilla palatina 41. Labium minus 07. Tooth 42. Hypophysis cerebri 08. Glandula parotis 43. Epiphysis 09. Glandula submandibularis 44. Glandula thyreoidea 10. Glandula sublingualis 45. Glandula parathyreoidea 11. Oesophagus 46. Corpus suprarenale 12. Cardia 47. Thymus 13. Fundus ventriculi 48. Artery and Vein 14. Pylorus 49. Aorta 15. Duodenum 50. Vena cava 16. Intestinum tenue 51. Myocardium 17. Intestinum crassum 52. Lymphonodus 18. Appendix 53. Lien (spleen) 19. Hepar (liver) 54. Skin from the top of finger 20. Vesica fellea (gall bladder) 55. Skin from the axilla 21. Pancreas 56. Skin with hairs 22. Epiglottis 57. Nail 23. Larynx 58. Mamma non lactans 24. Trachea 59. Mamma lactans 25. Pulmo (lung) 60. Cortex cerebri 26. Ren (kidney) 61. Cerebellum 27. Urethra 62. Medulla spinalis (spinal cord) 28. Vesica urinalis (urinary 63. Ganglion bladder) 64. Peripheral nerve 29. Testis 65. Anterior segment of the eye 30. Epididymis 66. Posterior segment of the eye 31. Funiculus spermaticus (spermatic 67. Palpebra cord) 68. Auricle 32. Glandula vesiculosa (seminal 69. Umbilical cord vesicle) 70. Placenta 33. Prostata 34. Penis
  • 3. 1. Labium oris Musculus Obicularis Oris is present (skeletal muscle) On the external surface is the skin with its adnexa On the inner surface is the mucosa (stratified squamous epithelium + lamina propria) and submucosa with mixed glands “Labial glands“). 2. Apex lingua Underneath the papillae, there are mucous and serous glands, pockets of adipose tissue, and a layer of skeletal muscle and connective tissue. The skeletal muscle is arranged in three different planes, which allows the tongue to perform a number of complex movements.
  • 4. 3. Papilla Circumvallata Surrounded by a deep furrow, where Ebners Glands open. Epithelia covering papilla (stratified squamous non-keratinizing). Taste buds are located on the lateral sides, in the epithelium. 4. Tonsilla lingualis A lymphatic structure that contains abundant germinal centers where immune cells undergo differentiation. Surface is covered with stratified squamous epithelium. 5. Soft palate: On the nasal side it is possible to see: – pseudostratified epithelium - lamina propria - submucosa with mixed glands “Nasal Glands“
  • 5. 5. Soft palate: On the oral side it is possible to see: – lining mucosa of the mouth cavity - submucosa with mucous glands “Palatine Glands“ 5. Hard palate: Covered by masticatory mucosa (stratified squamous epithelium) Note bone at the top, mucosa at the bottom and a large amount of salivary tissue between. A short distance from the lamina propria there is a large duct. 6. Tonsilla palatina The tonsils share some histological features with lymph nodes: 1. Cells in the tonsils are supported by a fine network of reticular fibres 2. High-endothelial (postcapillary ~) venules function in the "homing" of circulating lymphocytes - this is actually a shared feature of all lymphoid tissues and organs. The palatine tonsils are surrounded by a thick hemicapsule of connective tissue, which delimits them from the pharyngeal muscle and facilitates their removal in tonsillitis.
  • 6. 7. Tooth Pulp – jelly-like connective tissue with blood capillaries and fine nerve fibers. Odontoblasts are located on the external surface. Dentin –shows fine striation, caused by dentin tubules (contain the cytoplasmic processes of odontoblasts); dentin is stained in red or red- violet color, except thin layer near the odontoblasts – predentin (is not calcified) and peripheral layer below cementum and enamel (is irregularly calcified), dentin is pale in this layers. Enamel – is not present in decalcified tooth (it dissolves during decalcification). Cementum – covers the root(s) of the tooth; the thickest layer is on the root apex(es); it is not possible to distinguish primary (acellular) and secondary (cellular; with cementocytes) cementum in the light microscope. Periodontium – bundles of collagenous fibers, which hold the dental root in bone alveolus (rarely present in slides). 8. Parotid Gland A, Serous acini; B, Striated ducts; C, Ecretory duct Parotid gland – only serous (alveolar = acinar) gland Only serous intercalated – striated – interlobular – main The gland is internally divided into lobules. Blood vessels and nerves enter the glands at the hilum and gradually branch out into the lobules. Consists of paired glands surrounded with a connective tissue capsule; septa running from the capsule separate the glandular parenchyma into lobes and lobules. Blood vessels, nerves and interlobular ducts are found in the connective tissue of septa. Parenchyma is composed of intralobular ducts and secretory portions of glands. They consists of connective tissue = capsule + septa and parenchyma of lobules = ducts + secretory portions 9.Submandibular Gland A, Mucous acini; B, Serous acini mixed (80 % serous) serous acini mucouse tubuli intercalated – striated – interlobular – main
  • 7. 10. Sublingual gland A, Mucous acini of sublingual gland mixed (80 % mucous) mucous tubuli + lunuly of Ginuzzi only: interlobular – main 11. Oesophagus The esophagus consists of three layers: mucosa, submucosa, and muscularis. The mucosa consists of epithelial lining containing nonkeratinizing, stratified squamous epithelium with a layer of basal and parabasal cells. This layer is naturally required to proliferate more often than other layers of the oesophagus in accordance to necessary cell loss. The sublayer, lamina propria, contains vessels, connective tissue, lymphatics, inflammatory cells and esophageal cardiac glands which are mucus secreting glands. The submucosa contains dense connective tissue with both lymph and blood vessels. Further esophageal mucus secreting glands are contained in the submucosa. The outer layer, the muscularis, consists of two muscle layers. The inner muscle layer fibers are arranged circumferentially and the outer layer, longitudinally. 12. Cardia On histological examination, the junction can be identified by the following transition.  nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium in the esophagus  simple columnar epithelium in the stomach The cardiac glands can be seen in this region. They can be distinguished from other stomach glands (fundic glands and pyloric glands) because the glands are shallow and simple tubular.
  • 8. 13.Fundus ventriculi (vertical section to the surface of mucosa, HE) A. Tunica mucosa – see areae gastricae and foveolae gastrice 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall, simple columnar epithelium with secretory granules in the cell apexes, 2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar connective tissue with tubular glands - gll. gastricae propriae. In each gland, basis (near lamina muscularis mucosae), body and neck is distinguished; the gland is opened into the gastric pit throughout the neck. The cells of gll. gastricae: – chief cells - (pepsinogenous) - located predominantly at the basis, they have prismatic shape and basophilic cytoplasm, – parietal cells - (HCl cells) - in the body and below the neck, the cells are round triangular, their cytoplasm is strongly eosinophilic, – the cell of neck - light and columnar in the neck (their product is mucus), – endocrine cells - cannot be identified in slides stained with HE, 3. lamina muscularis mucosae – 2 layers of smooth muscle cells (inner - circular, outer - longitudinal). B. Tela submucosa - areolar connective tissue with vessels and nerves. C. Tunica muscularis (externa) – 3 layers of smooth muscle cells: oblique, circular and longitudinal layer. D. Tunica serosa: 1. simple squamous epithelium - mesotel, 2. lamina propria serosae – thin layer of collagenous connective tissue. 14. Pylorus deeper gastric pits, reticular conn. tissue, pyloric glands 15. Duodenum (longitudinal section through the wall, HE) A. Tunica mucosa – typical organization: villi intestinales; crypts of Lieberkühn 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae –simple columnar epithelium composed of absorptive cells and secretory cells (see descrition of the intestinum tenue) 2. lamina propria mucosae - reticular connective tissue with lymphatic nodules (formes underlying tissue of intestinal villi and surrounds the crypts of Lieberkühn), 3. lamina muscularis mucosae – smooth muscle tissue. B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue whith mucous glands – Brunner´s glands (an important signe of this part of small intestine!). C. Tunica muscularis (externa) - 2 layers of smooth muscle cells: inner circular and outer longitudinal. D. Tunica serosa – see description of the stomach.
  • 9. 16. Intestinum tenue - jejunum (longitudinal section through the wall, HE) Prior to study in microscope see plicae semicirculares Kerckringi, which are formed by mucosa and submucosa. A. Tunica mucosa – typical organization of the surface: villi intestinales - intestinal villi (their axis is made up of reticular connective tissue of lamina propria mucosae) with central lymphatic vessel (lacteal vessel) in each villus; crypts of Lieberkühn - tubular invagination among villi, their bases reach lamina muscularis mucosae: 1. Lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall, simple columnar epithelium composed of absorptive cells - enterocytes and secretory cells: – goblet cells - thei have cup-like shape, flattened nucleus and very pale cytoplasm containing mucus, goblet cells are diffused in the epithelium and their number increased in aboral direction, – cells of Paneth - round triangular or pyramidal shape, spherical nucleus, eosinophilic granules in cytoplazm, the cells are located only in basis of crypts of Lieberkühn (these cells are unstained in older slides because the granules are discolored), – endocrine cells - cannot be identified in slides stained with HE, 2. lamina propria mucosae - reticular connective tissue with lymphatic nodules (formes underlying tissue of intestinal villi and surrounds the crypts of Lieberkühn), 3. lamina muscularis mucosae – smooth muscle tissue. B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue, whish also forms the axis of folds of Kerckring (plicae semicirculares Kerckringi). C. Tunica muscularis (externa) - 2 layers of smooth muscle cells: inner circular and outer longitudinal. D. Tunica serosa – see description of the stomach.
  • 10. 17. Intestinum crassum (longitudinal section through the wall, HE) Plicae semicirculares Kerckringi and intestinal villi are NOT present – luminal surface is smooth. A. Tunica mucosa: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall columnar epithelium consists of absorptive cells – enterocytes, 2. lamina propria mucosae – reticular connective tissue with lymphatic nodules; crypts of Lieberkühn are deep and numerous, they are lined with the same epithelium (ad 1.); except enterocytes, numerous goblet cells and some enteroendocrine cells (are not visible in LM) are present in the epithelium, 3. lamina muscularis mucosae – smooth muscle tissue. B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue with blood vessels and nerves (plexus submucosus Meissneri). C. Tunica muscularis (externa) – two layers of smooth muscle cells bundles – inner circular and outer longitudinal (nerve – plexus myentericus Auerbachi in connective tissue between them). D. Tunica serosa (see practice nr. 2). 18. Processus vermiformis, appendix (cross section, HE) A. Tunica mucosa – intestinal villi are missing, crypts of Lieberkühn are shallow and irregular: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple collumnar epithelium composed of enterocytes, goblet cells and enteroendocrine cells, 2. lamina propria mucosae – reticular connective tissue with numerous active lymphatic nodules, 3. lamina muscularis mucosae – usually is missing or irregular. B. Tela submucosa – loose connective tissue with vesssels and nerves. C. Tunica muscularis (externa) – thin layers of smooth muscle tissue (circular and longitudinal layer). D. Tunica serosa - mesothelium and thin layer of collagenous connective tissue.
  • 11. 19. Hepar (Hematoxylin-eosin or Azan) A. Liver connective tissue (c.t.): 1. capsula fibrosa hepatis – dense collagenous c.t. (it is present only in some slides), 2. c.t. in portal areas – loose c.t.; portal area has triangular shape and is surrounded by 3 – 4 morphological units = liver lobules of central vein; c.t. of portal area carries interlobular brunches of a.hepatica, v.portae and interlobular bile duct, 3. interlobular c.t. – separates liver lobules in the rest of their surface (outside the portal areas), only minimum of this c.t. is in human liver. B. Liver parenchyma – consists of morphological units = lobules of central vein (liver lobules) and intrahepatic bile ducts: 1. lobules of central vein – five to six–sided polyhedral prisms in the sections, composed of plates (cords in the sections) of hepatocytes; plates (cords) are organized radialy around v. centralis: – hepatic plates – consist of 1 - 2 lines of hepatocytes, which surround bile canaliculi (are not visible in the sections), – liver sinusoids – are situated between plates, have an irregular width of the lumen, and are lined with endothelium; Kupffer cells are present in the regions where the sinusids are branched, – vena centralis – thinwalled vein in the center of the lobule (endothelium and thin layer of loose c.t.), Functional unit: portal lobule (lobule of portal vein) – parts of parenchyma of 3 morphological units surrounding common portal area (triangular region with portal area in the center – join central veins of 3 nighbour liver lobules) smaller unit is liver acinus – parencyma of 2 liver lobules arround common circumlobular side. 2. intrahepatic bile ducts: – canals of Herring – continue bile canaliculi and are lined with simple cuboid epithelium (canals are located at the periphery of the lobules). – interlobular bile ducts – simple cuboid to columnar epithelium – in portal areas. – lobar bile ducts – are two; their wall consists of tall columnar epithelium, lamina basalis and a layer of c.t. (are not found in the slides).
  • 12. 20. Vesica fellea (Hematoxylin - eosin) Tunica mucosa: numerous mucosal folds 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – tall columnar epithelium (produce mucus), 2. lamina propria mucosae – reticular connective tissue with lymphatic nodules; crypts of Lieberkühn are deep and numerous, they are lined with the same epithelium (ad 1.); except enterocytes, numerous goblet cells and some enteroendocrine cells (are not visible in LM) are present in the epithelium, A. lamina muscularis mucosae – is NOT present. B. Tela submucosa – is NOT present. C. Tunica muscularis (externa) –smooth muscle tissue (longitudinal and oblique orientation). D. Tunica serosa – covers free surface of gall bladder and has very thick layer of subserosal c.t.; the surface turned to the liver tissue is covered with adventitia. 21. Pancreas (Hematoxylin - eosin) A. Connective tissue (c.t.): 1. dense collagenous c.t. of capsule and septa, which carry blood vessels and interlobular ducts, septa separate gland into the lobules, 2. loose c.t. inside of lobules (intralobular c.t.). B. Parenchyma – lobules; each of them contains elongated serous acini (exocrine part of gland), intralobular ducts and one or more islet(s) of Langerhans (endocrine part of gland without ducts): 1. serous acini: – serous cells – triangular or pyramid shape, nucleus at the basis of the cell, secretory granules in supranuklear zone of cytoplasm (granules stain intensely), – centroacinar cells – polygonal shape, pale cytoplasm; cells are situated only in the center of acinus, 2. ducts – intercalated and interlobular: – intercalated – simple squamous epithelium, narrow lumen (identification is dificult), – intralobular ducts – arrise by fusion of intercalated ducts, simple cuboid epithelium (epithelial cells without basal straition – they have not basal labyrinth), 3. islets of Langerhans: – fine capsule (with fine collagen and reticular fibers) separates the islet from acini, – cord of glandular endocrine cells – cells are polyhedral and pale (the main identifying sign); blood sinusoids form a network around cords of the cells. Notice: endocrine celss is not possible to classify in HE slides.
  • 13. 22. Epiglottis Epiglottis prevents food from entering the trachea. Structure: - plate of elastic cartilage - lingual side: stratiffied squamous epithelium + lamina propria, - laryngeal side: pseudostratified columnar epithelium with cilia + mixed glands in lamina propria,
  • 14. 23. Larynx This area of the larynx is typified by two items: (1) hyaline cartilage (lower left) and (2) sero-mucous glands (upper right). Epithelium is usually pseudostratified columnar ciliated. the wall structure: - mucosa – epithelium of respiratory passages + lamina propria with elastic fibers and mixed glands - fibrocartilagenous layer with large hyaline and small elastic cartilages - external muscle coat = skeletal muscle tissue The organ of fonation - laryngeal ventricle (vestibule) - plica vocalis (with stratified squamous epithelium, elastic ligament – ligamentum vocale and skeletal muscle – musculus vocalis) - plica ventricularis (the same structure as in the larynx wall 24. Trachea Hollow tubular organ – structure of its wall: - mucosa – epithelium of respiratory passages + lamina propria with elastic fibers and mixed glands - fibrocartilagenous layer with ring- shaped, dorsaly opened hyaline cartilages (16 – 20), dorsal part of the wall is called paries membranaceus – cartilage is substituted by tracheal muscle (smooth) - adventitia (connective tissue with nerves and blood vessels)
  • 15. 25. Lung parenchyma Lung lobule – part of parenchyme, which is ventilated by one terminal bronchiole. This bronchiole branches into respiratory bronchioli and these are branched into alveolar ducts. The ends of ducts are dilated into sacs. The wall of ducts and sacs is very thin and alvoli bulge from it. Thin wall of alveoli (0.2 µm) = interalveolar septum: consists of fine reticular and elastic fibers surrounding blood capillaries and some alveolar macrophages and is covered with respiratory epithelium on both sides (luminal surfaces of alveoli). Alveolar pores – in septa. Respiratory epithelium: simple epithelium with 2 types of cells - alveolar cells type I (membranous pneumocytes) – transport of gasses by pinocytosis - alveolar cells type II (granular pneumocytes) – produce surfactant (antiatelectatic substance) The lungs are large, lobed, paired organs in the chest (also known as the thoracic cavity). Thin sheets of epithelium (pleura) separate the inside of the chest cavity from the outer surface of the lungs. The bottom of the thoracic cavity is formed by the diaphragm
  • 16. 26. Ren (perpendicular section to the surface of kidney, HE or HES and Weigert-van Gieson) A. Connective tissue (c.t.): 1. capsula fibrosa renis – dense colagenous c.t., 2. interstitial loose c.t. of renal parenchyma (more in renal medulla, less in renal cortex). B. Parenchyma of kidney – cortex and medulla: 1. cortex (substantia corticalis) – bellow capsula fibrosa renis and as columnae renales between pyramids of medulla. Cortex corticis (continuous layer of cortex bellow capsule), pars radiata corticis above the bases of medullary pyramids – with strips of cortex and medulla (striae medullares corticis). ^cortex Substantia corticalis contains renal corpuscles and some parts of renal tubules: – renal corpuscle (corpusculum renis): glomerulum - small ball of blood capillaries surrounded by mesangial cells + Bowman´s capsule (capsula glomeruli), made up of parietal and visceral layer with thin space between them (urinary space), in which glomerular urin is collected; - parietal layer – simple squamous epithelium + basement membrane, - visceral layer – podocytes (flattened cells which closely adjoin basement membrane of capillaries). – urinary tubule (its parts): - proximal convoluted tubule – has irregular lumen and is lined with simple lower- collumnar epithelium with brush border on luminal surface, borders between cells are not distinct and nuclei are irregularly scattered around lumen, cell cytoplams is intensly eosinophilic; cells are situated on the basement membrane, - distal convoluted tubule – has regular lumen, lined with simple cuboidal epithelium without brush border, cell nuclei are regularly arranged around the lumen, cell cytoplasm stains lightly eosinophilic; basement membrane, - connecting segment (arched collecting tubules) – similar to distal tubule, Notice: it is dificult to find vascular or uriniferous pole of renal corpuscle or macula densa, because only small ^medulla amount of corpuscles are sectioned throughout this
  • 17. poles. 2. medulla of kidney (substantia medullaris) forms pyramids and striae medullares corticis; medulla contains: – pars recta of proximal tubule – the same morphological signs as in pars convoluta (see above), – Henle´s loop (ansa nephroni): - thin segment – simple squamous epithelium + basement membrane, - thick segment – simple cuboidal epithelium + basement membrane, – collecting tubules – lumen is wider than in renal tubules; simple cuboidal to lower- columnar epithelium (cell cytoplasm is very pale and apical parts of the cells form konvex protrusions) + basement membrane, – ductus papillares (Bellini) – occure near the top of pyramid; they have the widest lumen lined with pale and tall columnar cells on the basement membrane. The wall of urinary passages – generally: A.Tunica mucosa: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – transitional epithelium (except urethra), 2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar collagenous c.t. with elastic fibers. 3. lamina muscularis mucosae B. Tela submucosa C. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue. D. Tunica adventitia. 27. Vesica urinalis (perpendicular section to the surface of urinary bladder, HE) A. Tunica mucosa – forms irregular folds: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – transitional epithelium, 2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar collagenous c.t. with elastic fibers. B. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue, forms 3 not distinc layers: inner – plexiform, middle – circular, outer - longitudinal. C. Tunica adventitia or tunica serosa (according to place from which the sample was taken).
  • 18. 28. Ureter (cross section, HE) A. Tunica mucosa – forms longitudinal folds (lumen of the ureter is star-shaped): 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – transitional epithelium, 2. lamina propria mucosae – areolar collagenous c.t. with elastic fibers. B. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue: 2 (3) layers: inner - longitudinal, middle - circular , outer (only in lower 1/3) - longitudinal. C. Tunica adventitia – loose c.t. with vessels and nrves. 29. Testis (Hematoxyline-eosin /HE/ or - safron /HES/) A. Connective tissue (c.t.): 1. tunica albuginea testis – dense c.t. membrane on the surface of testicles – is fused with epiorchium and thickened into mediastinum testis on dorsal side; it contains anastomosing clefts – rete testis (lined with aimple squamous or cuboidal epithelium), 2. septula testis – taper from mediastinum and divide testis incompletely into the lobules, 3. interstitial c.t. – loose collagenous c.t. among seminiferous tubules; this c.t. contains blood and lymph vessels, nerves and Leydig cells; Leydig cells are oval to polygonal, they have eosinophilic cytoplasm and occure single or in groups near the blood capillaries. B. Tubuli seminiferi contorti – in cross and oblique sections. Their wall is composed of seminiferous epithelium, which contains spermatogenic cells in different stage of development and the cells of Sertoliho, 1. spermatogenic cells: – spermiogonia – middle-sized spherical cells with finelly dispersed chromatin in the nucleus; they are localized in one layer near tunica propria of seminiferous tubule, – spermiocytes – the largest cells in epithelium, spherical or polyhedral, with visible chromosomes in the nucleus; they are localized in several layers above spermiogonia, – prespermatids – spherical cells, smaller than spermiocytes, their nucleus is in interphase; the cells are near the lumen of tubule, – spermatids – the smallest cells with roubnd or ovoid nucleus with densely condensed chromatin; developing flagellum on luminal side of some cells is obviuos,
  • 19. 2. Sertoli (supporting) cells – are usually covered by spermatogenic cells (only nuclei of Sertoli cells can be identified in the slides – these are oval, pale, with distinct nucleoli; nuclei are found in basal third of spermiogenic epithelium), 3. tunica propria – c.t. (basement membrane, loose network of elastic and collagenous fibers and fibrocytes). 30. Epididymis (Hematoxyline-eosin /HE/ or - safron /HES/) A. Connective tissue (c.t.): 1. dense collagenous c.t. forms capsule, 2. loose collagenous c.t. with numerous vessels among spirally convoluted canaliculi. B. Canal of epididymis: 1. ductuli efferentes - in caput epididymidis; they have irregular-shaped lumen and their wall consists of: – lamina epithelialis – low cuboid and tall columnar cells occurre in epithelium and some of them are ciliated, – membrana propria – loose collagenous c.t. with circularly oriented smooth muscle cells, 2. ductus epididymidis - forms corpus et cauda epididymidis; cross and oblique sections of duct with spermatozooa in the lumen are usually found in the slide. The wall of duct is composed of: – lamina epithelialis – pseudostratified columnar epithelium with stereocilia, – membrana propria – see above – the same layer in the wall of ductuli efferentes.
  • 20. 31. Funiculus spermaticus (Cross section, HE) Spermatic cord contains loose c.t. and bundle of: 1. ductus deferens (the largest structure with thick wall: mucosa, tunica muscularis, adventitia) 2. veins of plexus pampiniformis 3. arteries 4. nerves The cord is covered with c.t. capsule and irregularly m. cremaster (skeletal muscle) 32. Glandula vesiculosa (Cross section, HE) A. Tunica mucosa – numerous anastomosing primary, secondary and terciary folds and crypts, 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple cuboid to pseudostratified columnar epithelium with glandular cells, 2. lamina propria mucosae – loose collagenous c.t. B. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle tissue arranged into 2 layers: inner - circular, outer - longitudinal. C. Tunica adventitia – loose collagenous c.t. 33. Prostata (Hematoxyline-eosin or Azan) A. Connective tissue (c.t.): 1. capsule – dense c.t. with smooth muscle cells , 2. fibromuscular stroma - elastic and collagenous fibers and bundles of smooth muscle cells. B. Glands of prostate - tubular with irregular lumen; epithelium projects into the lumen like folds; calcified bodies occurre in the lumen of some glands - prostatic sand. Glandular wall consists of epithelium and basement membrane: 1. epithelium – simple cuboid to pseudostratified columnar with irregular layer of low basal cells (cell height depends on secretory phase), 2. basement membrane – is not distinct in the slides.
  • 21. 34. Penis (Cross section, HE) A. Skin – very thin, contains sweet and sebaceous glands, loose subcutaneous c.t. without fat cells. B. Corpora cavernosa: 1. Corpus cavernosum penis (paired): – tunica albuginea on the surface – dense collagenous c.t., – erectile tissue – venous lacunae lined with epithelium, their wall contain collagenous c.t., bundles of smooth muscle cells and elastic fibers, 2. Corpus spongiosum urethrae (unpaired): Similar structure as corpus cavernosum penis; it contains pars spongiosa urethrae, which mucosa form longitudinal folds (star-shaped lumen): – mucosa: stratified columnar epihteiuml with endoepithelial mucous glands (lacunae urethrales Morgagni); lamina propria – loose collagenous c.t. with numerous venous plexuses and tubular mucous glands (gll. paraurethrales Littrei), – muscle layer – reduced into the irregular bundles, – adventitia – loose c.t. which continues into the c.t. of corpus spongiosum.
  • 22. 35. Ovarium (perpendicular section to the surface of ovary, HE or HES) First note that the ovary has a cortex-medullary organization and is surrounded by a thick connective tissue capsule, the tunica albuginea. The surface of the tunica albuginea is covered with a cuboidal, germinal epithelium. This slide illustrates all the phases of follicular development. A. Cortex of the ovary (zona corticalis) – highly cellular connective tissue (c.t.) is composed of fibrocyte and small amount of c.t. fibers. C.t. is condensed into tunica albuginea ovarii bellow simple cuboid epithelium, which coveres the ovarian surface. B. Cortex contains ovarian follicles (primary, secondary and terciary), „yellow“ and „white“ bodies – corpora lutea and corpora albicantia: 1. primordial follicles – beneath tunica albuginea ovarii; they consists of: – oocyte – cell, which has 40 to 50 µm in diameter (), eosinophilic cytoplasm and pale nucleus with basophilic nucleolus, – one layer of flattened folicullar cells (surround oocyte), 2. growing follicles - 0,1 to 3 mm ; they are localized in deeper parts of cortex; their structure depend on the stage of development (primary unilaminar follicle, primary multilaminar follicle and secondary follicle with small cavities fusing together ): – oocyte – about 100 µm  with eosinophilic cytoplasm, surrounded by zona pellucida, – follicular cells – are arranged into several layers around the oocyte, cells have polyhedral shape except the cells in basal layer attached to basement membrane – these cells are cuboid or low columnar, – theca folliculi – c.t. coat with oval fibroblast circularly arranged, 3. mature Graafian follicles - they have cavity (antrum folliculi), 4 mm to 1,5 cm : – oocyte – 150 µm , eosinophilic cytoplasm, excentrically situated nucleus, zona pellucida, – follicular cells – in several layer form membrana granulosa, which lines antrum folliculi, bump- like projection of membrana granulosa contains oocyte and is called cumulus oophorus, – theca folliculi – by membrane of Slavjanski is separated from membrana granulosa and divides into: theca folliculi interna and theca folliculi externa, 4. corpus luteum (sg.) – see description of the
  • 23. following slide, 5. corpora albicantia (pl.) – they have different shape and size and are made up of hyalinized c.t. C. Medulla of the ovary (zona vasculosa) – dense c.t. with spiral blood vessels, lymph vessels and nerves. Corpus luteum (CL) (Hematoxyline - eosin) A. C.t. of CL – capsule and fine septa, penetrating into the parenchyma of CL; c.t. fills the center of CL (original antrum folliculi). B. Parenchyma of CL: 1. lutein cells – the main cell type, cells are large, pale, polyhedral and organized into frilling strip; there are numerous blood sinusoids among the cells, 2. thecal cells - 2 - 3 times smaller than lutein cells, they are present at the periphery of CL and sporadically penetrate the folds with lutein cells; blood sinusoids are also present among the cells. 36. Tuba uterina (2 x) - pars ampullaris and pars isthmica (cross section, HE or HES) A. Tunica mucosa: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple columnar epithelium, composed of ciliated cells (CC) and secretory cells (SC), 2. lamina propria mucosae – loose c.t. B. Tunica muscularis – smooth muscle cells (circular and longitudinal layer). C. Tunica serosa – simple squamous epithelium (mesothelium) + thin layer of loose c.t.; subserous c.t. with ovarian and uterine vessels is between serosa and tunica muscularis. AMPULLA Epithelium - primary, secondary and terciary folds, which fill the lumen, abundant ciliated cells [CC > SC] External Muscle coat / layer - thin irregular
  • 24. ^Pars Ampullaris 37. Isthmus Epithelium - sporadic simple longitudinal folds, -abundant secretory cells [SC > CC] ^Pars Isthmica 38. Uterus - prolipherative phase (perpendicular section to the surface of mucosa, HE) A. Endometrium (tunica mucosa) – thickeness 2 - 3 mm, divides into zona functionalis (with bodies and openings of uterine glands) and zona basalis (close to the myometrium – contains bases of glands). Consists of: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple columnar epithelium, 2. lamina propria mucosae – is composed of star shaped or polygonal fibrocytes and minimum of c.t. fibers; it is highly vascularized and contains simple tubular glands - glandulae uterinae, lined with simple columnar epithelium. B. Myometrium (tunica muscularis) – thick layer of bundles of smooth muscle cells spiraly organized.
  • 25. C. Parametrium – loose c.t. with blood vessels and nerves between myometrium and perimetrium. D. Perimetrium (tunica serosa) – simple squamous epithelium (mesothelium) + thin layer of loose c.t. . 39. Uterus – secretory phase (perpendicular section to the surface of mucosa, HE) A. Endometrium (tunica mucosa) – thickness 6 – 7 mm; zona functionalis is divided into pars compacta (surface layer with glandular ducts and high amount of c.t.) and pars spongiosa (contains dilated bodies of glands and only small amount of c.t.), zona basalis – does not change during mestrual cycle. Structure of the endometrium: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – simple columnar epithelium, 2. lamina propria mucosae – fibrocyte are enlarged, round, without cytoplasmic processes, dense network of blood capillaries; bodies of glandulae uterinae are dilated and have an typical appearance. (B., C. a D. – see Uterus - prolipherative phase)
  • 26. 40. Vagina (Hematoxylin-eosin or Best´s carmine) A. Tunica mucosa – forms transversal folds - rugae: 1. lamina epithelialis mucosae – stratified squamous epithelium, its surface cells contain glycogen (they are pale in HE slides – because glycogen granules are dissolved), 2. lamina propria mucosae – loose collagenous c.t. with elastic fibers and venous plexuses, lamina propria forms papillae. B. Tunica muscularis – bundles of smooth muscle tissue runing in circular, longitudinal and oblique direction. C. Tunica adventitia – dense c.t. of cavum pelvis subperitoneale. 41. Labium minus (cross section, HE) Labium is skin fold; 1. epidermis – stratified squamous epithelium with signs of keratinization, 2. dermis – connective tissue axis with nerve fibers and Meissner bodies in subepithelial papillae, a sebaceous glands, which duct are opened on the epidermal surface of labium; c.t. does not contain any fat cells.
  • 27. 42. Hypophysis Cerebri A. Connective tissue (c.t.): 1. thin c.t. capsule and septa with blood vessels and nerves, 2. network of reticular fibers (they separate glandular cells and blood sinusoids). B. Parenchyma of hypophysis: 1. anterior lobe (adenohypophysis) – divides into pars distalis, pars tuberalis and pars intermedia: – pars distalis and tuberalis consist of cords and groups of glandular cells, which are divided according amount of granules and staining: chromophobe cells – light cytoplasm, small amount of granules, acidophil cells – numerous granules stains in red color, basophil cells – numerous granules stains in violet color, – pars intermedia – contains follicles (usually with colloid), basophilic and chromophobe cells predominate in cords, 2. posterior lobe (neurohypophysis) – is connected by infundibulum with hypothalamus (infundibulum is not usually present in the slides); structure of posterior lobe: – pituicytes – irregular-shaped cells with numerous processes, – unmyelinized nerve fibers (tractus hypothalamohypophyseus).
  • 28. 43. Epiphysis Cerebri A. Connective tissue: 1. thin c.t. capsule (pia mater) and fine septa s with blood vessels, 2. loose interstitial c.t. with blood sinusoids. B. Parenchyma of epiphysis: 1. cords and groups of 2 types of cells – pinealocytes and neuroglial cells, 2. unmyelinized nerve fibers, 3. acervulus cerebri – intensly stained calcified corpuscles (brain sand) of irregular shape.
  • 29. 44. Glandula Thyroidea A. Connective tissue: 1. capsule from dense collagenous c.t. with blood and lymph vesels and nerves, 2. c.t. septa – are distinct and separate gland into the lobules, 3. interstitial c.t. – loose c.t. with net of capillaris, around follicles. B. Lobules – consist of follicles lined with epithelium and containing colloid: 1. epithelium in follicle – simple, its high depends on functional stage and size of follicle; it is composed of follicular and parafollicular cells (parafollicular cells can be idetified only with using of special staining methods), 2. colloid – fills cavity of each follicle, it has homogenous appearance and is usually stained with acid dyes. 45. Glandula Parathyroidea A. Connective tissue: 1. thin c.t. capsule and septa with blood vessels and nerves, 2. net of reticular fibers (separate glandular cells and blood capillaries). B. Parenchyma – cords and groups of glandular cells: 1. chief cells – predominate, with light basophilic cytoplasm, 2. oxyphil cells – with intensly eosinophilic cytoplasm (they are lined in older slides, its result of discoloration) – they occure after 10th year of age.
  • 30. 46. Glandula Suprarenalis A. Connective tissue: 1. dense c.t. capsule and thin radial septa with blood vessels, 2. net of reticular fibers around cords of glandular cells and blood sinusoids. B. Parenchyma - 9/10 form cortex, the rest represents medulla: 1. cortex: – zona glomerulosa – bellow c.t. capsule, cell cords are coiled like glomerule, cell cytoplasm is basophilic, – zona fasciculata – middle, the most voluminous layer with paralelly oriented cell cords (perpendicularly to the capsule); cells are large, vakuolized (spongiocytes), – zona reticularis – cell cords anastomose and form network (reticulum); cells are small, eosinophilic and contain granules of lipofuscin, 2. medulla: – cords and groups of chromaffine cells with finely granular, basophilic cytoplasm, – nerve fibers and solitary ganglionic cells.
  • 31. 47. Thymus The thymus is a highly lobulated organ invested by a loose collagenous capsule, C, from which short interlobular septa, S, containing blood vessels radiate into the substance of the organ. The thymic tissue is divided into two distinct zones, a deeply basophilic outer cortex, Cx, and an inner eosinophilic medulla, M; distinction between the two zones is most marked in early childhood as is represented in this specimen. - is usually most active in teenagers and shrinks in adulthood. The process of thymus transformation during aging is called involution. - Cortex (outer regions) and medulla (inner regions) are distinguished in parenchym. - Parenchym is composed of cytoreticulum (stelate epithelial cells forming network) and T-lymphocytes. Cytoreticulum originates from endoderm of pharyngeal pouches and cytokeratin (protein typical for epithelial cells) can be detected in the cytoplasm of its cells. - Thymus is composed of 2 lobes covered with capsule (dense irregular connective tissue), septa running from capsule into parenchym separate it into lobules. Lobules contains only cortex. Cortex: cytoreticulum ( ) + lymphocytes (95 %), blood capillaries with thick wall covered with cytoplasmic processes of cytoreticulum cells = „thymus-blood barrier“ Medulla: cytoreticulum + small amount of lymphocytes (5 %), Hassal´s corpuscles ( )– arrise by aggregation of cytoreticulum cells, which degenerate in the center of body ( ). Young thymus: The cortex, Cx, is packed with lymphocytes, accounting for its basophilia, whereas the medulla, M, contains fewer lymphocytes. In the center of the medulla are eosinophilic, lamellated structures known as Hassall’s corpuscles, H, representing degenerate epithelial reticular cells. well distinguished cortex and medulla.
  • 32. 48. Arteries and veins The wall of arteries and veins of large or medium caliber have three tunics: tunica intima (interna), tunica media, and tunica adventitia (externa). General structure of tunics - tunica intima – the endothelial lining with its basal lamina and subendothelial layer with longitudinally oriented elastic fibers - tunica media – in artery more then in veins: spiraly and circularly oriented connective tissue fibers organized into elastic fenestrated membranes and smooth muscle cells, the ratio of smooth muscle cells and elastic membranes depends on the type of blood artery - tunica adventitia – contains collagen and elastic fibers, scattered fibroblasts. – in vein more then in arteries: longitudinally oriented bundles of smooth muscle cells, serrounded with connective tissue The tunica adventitia contains small blood vessels (vasa vasorum), which supply nutrients to tissues in the outer one-half of the wall of the blood vessel. Small nerves (nervi vasorum), representing fibers of the autonomic nervous system, are also present in the tunica adventitia and they innervate the smooth muscle of the vessel. Elastic laminae – inner and outer – separate tunics in the vessel wall. These laminae (membrana elastica interna et externa) are made up of elastic fibers. Inner membrane separates intima from media and outer one separate media from adentitia. Outer membrane is not usually distinct in all veins and small arteries.
  • 33. 49. Aorta Large arteries = Elastic arteries (examples: aorta and and pulmonary arteries, the immediate branches of these arteries are also considered to be elastic arteries – brachiocephalic, common carotids, etc.). have sheets of elastic tissue in their walls and are the largest diameter arteries. They are subjected to high systolic pressures. These large vessels are also adapted to smooth out the surges in blood flow since blood only flows through them during systole. The elastic tissue in their tunic media provides the resilience to smooth out this pressure wave. The tunica intima is relatively thick and consists of an endothelial layer with its basal lamina, a subendothelial layer of connective tissue and an internal elastic membrane. The internal elastic membrane is not as conspicuous because it is one of the many elastic membranes in the wall of the arteries. It is usually only identified because it is the innermost of the elastic layers of the arterial wall. The tunica media is the thickest of the three layers. The numerous, thick, fenestrated elastic membranes are the predominant substance of the media. They are interconnected by fine elastic fibers and also by smooth muscle cells, which spirals at a slight angle to the transverse axis of the vessel. The smooth muscle cells is surrounded by reticular fibers and a few collagenous fibers. In elastic arteries, the tunica adventitia is relatively thin – half the thickness of the media – and contains collagen fibers, elastic fibers and connective tissue cells (fibroblasts and macrophages). The tunica adventitia contains blood vessels (vasa vasorum) and nerves (nervi vasorum) that supply the blood vessel wall.
  • 34. 50. Large veins (examples: vena cava, subclavian veins) In large veins, the tunica media is relatively thin and consists of an endothelial lining with its basal lamina, a small amount of subendothelial tissue and some smooth muscle cells. Thin tunica media contains sparse, circularly arranged smooth muscle. Also present are collagen fibers and some fibroblasts. The most obvious feature is the thickness of the tunica adventitia. In large veins, large bundles of longitudinal disposed smooth muscle cells are found with the usual collagen and elastic fibers. Vena cava (HE) tunica interna is not distinct in this small magnification SM = smooth muscle bundles of adventitia TA = tunica adventitia TM = tunica media vv = vasa vasorum 52. Lymph Node - capsula fibrosa + septa = irregular dense connective tissue; several afferent lymphatic vessels (opened into lymphatic sinus below the capsule = sinus subcapsularis) and 1-2 efferent vessels (from hillus of node) - parenchym = consists of peripheral cortex and central medulla, and paracortical zone (between cortex and medulla) Cortex: reticular connctive tissue + B- lymphocytes organized into lymphatic nodule (follicles), some of them are active with light germinative center. Paracortical zone: reticular connctive tissue + T-lymphocytes and macrophages Medulla: reticular connctive tissue + B- lymphocytes organized int cords - lymphatic sinuses – sinus subcapsularis  sinus corticalis (perifollicularis)  sinus medullaris The wall of sinuses is lined with reticular cells (called litoral cells) and macrophages, reticular fibers network substitutes missing basal lamina 1. The subcapsular sinus of lymph node: (E) – reticular cells lining on both the capsule (Caps) side and nodule (CN) side of the sinus (SCS). Present within the sinus are lymphocytes (Ly); dendritic, antigen-presenting cells (DRC) and macrophages
  • 35. (Mph). 2. Macrophages in the wall of sinus phagocyting colored material. Lymph Node Capsule Details: As the lymph slowly flows through the maze of cells antigens are processed and lymphocytes become activat Subcapsular Sinus Cells: Dendritic cells and macrophages act as antigen presenters. Specific Lymphocytes are activated by a presented antigen for a specific invader. . 53. Lien (spleen) Structure: 1. connective tissue capsule (capsula fibrosa) consists of dense irregular c.t. and is covered with simple squamous epithelium. Septa entering splenic parenchym are calle trabecules and are derivatives if capsule. 2. parenchym = pulp: - white pulp: is a typical lymphatic tissue with lymphocytes in reticular c.t., capsule lymphocytes are located around central arteris forming so called periarterial lymphatic sheath (PALS), this sheaths is sometimes extended into lymphatic nodules (follicle) = bodies of Malpighi. PALS contains T-lymphocytes, in nodules and on the periphery of PALS B- lymphocytes and macrophages and dendritic cells are present. Periphery of PALS and nodules is called marginal zone and contains also many blood sinuses. - red pulp: is composed of reticular c.t. with different cell types around sinuses. Free cells are macrophages, lymphocytes, Red pulp granulocytes and mainly erythrocytes. Reticular c.t. with cells form cords of Billroth and these cords surrounds venous sinuses. 3. Blood circulation: A. lienalis entres the splenic hilus  its branches pass through the trabecules as aa. trabeculares  when they leave the trabecules, they are called aa. centrales and are followed by lymphatic tissue (PALS + boides of Malpighi)  these arteries are branched at the end into arteriolae penicilatae: eache arteriole has 3 parts: 1. arteriole of pulp (medullary arteriole), White pulp 2. encapsulated arteriole (surrounded by
  • 36. phagocyting reticular cells – capsule) and 3. precapillary which opens into  venous sinuses in red pulp  near the trabecules, blood from sinuses is collected into vv. trabeculares which fuse into v. lienalis. 54. Skin from top of finger Keratinization is in layers No glands Nails No hair Merkel´s cells 600-800 µm for the thick skin/ 55. Skin from axilla varies between 75 and 150 µm for the thin skin Little keratinazation Adipose tissue Glands Hair
  • 37. 56. Skin with hair Keratinzed Hair follicles Hair 57. Nail
  • 38. 58. Nonlactating mammary glands glandular tissue is reduced on only duct system, e.g. lactiferous ducts, terminal interlobular ducts and intralobular ducts an area of one interlobular duct is a lobule the lobules are separated by a denser, less cellular interlobular connective tissue spaces within lobules are filled with loose intralobular tissue abundant in cells. 59. Lactating mammary glands glandular tissue is fully differentiated by thin connective tissue septa, the glandular parenchyma is divided into the lobules lobules contains spherical to elongated acini (alveoli) differ in size the wall of acini consist of - the basement membrane - cuboidal or columnar secretory cells and - myoepithelial cells located between the basement membrane and bases of secretory cells/ducts a) intralobular ducts lined by a simple cuboidal to columnar epithelium b) lactiferous ducts lined by two layers of columnar cells which, in the lactiferous sinus, changes into stratified squamous epithelium • the first secretion appearing after birth is called the colostrum • it contains less fat and more protein than regular milk and is rich in antibodies
  • 39. 60. Cortex cerebri (perpendicular section to the surface of brain, HE or impregnation) A. Pia mater cerebri – thin c.t. membrane with numerous blood vessels. B. Brain cortex (neocortex) = gray matter – consists of 6 layers (not distinctly separated), which are distinguished according to prevailing type of neurons: 1. lamina molecularis (lamina zonalis): – small multipolar neurons with horizontaly oriented processes (cells of Cajal) – in deeper parts of this layer, – nuclei of plasmatic astrocytes – in upper part of the layer – their cytoplasmic processes form together membrana limitans gliae superficialis, 2. lamina granularis externa – small polyhedral and pyramidal neurons, 3. lamina pyramidalis (lamina pyramidalis externa) – middle-sized pyramidal neurons (the apexes of pyramids are oriented to the surface of gyrus) + cells of Martinotti, 4. lamina granularis interna – the same structure as the second layer, 5. lamina ganglionaris (lamina pyramidalis interna) - large pyramidal cells; their cytoplasmic processes are better visualized in impregnated slides, 6. lamina multiformis – spindle-shaped neurons and numerous cells of Martinotti. C. White matter – bellow the 6th layer of cortex, is composed of radially arranged nerve fibers. 61. Cerebellum (Hematoxyline-eosin, Nissl or impregnation) A. Pia mater cerebelli – c.t. membrane with numerous blood vessels. B. Cortex cerebelli: 1. stratum cinereum (stratum moleculare) - due to small amount of neurons this layer is pale in HE and Nissl slides, impregnated slide shows richly branched dendrites of Purkinje cells and neurites of basket cells (they are oriented paralelly with surface of gyrus and send collaterals to the bodies of Purkinje cells), 2. stratum gangliosum (vrstva Purkyňových buněk): pear- shaped bodies of Purkinje cells with light nucleus and distinct nucleolus, Nissl substance is present in the cytoplasm of bodies and dendrites (see slides stained according to Nissl) + nuclei of macroglia – modified plasmaticé astrocytes, 3. stratum granulosum: – small (4 - 6 µm) and middle-sized multipolar neurons and their processes, – glomeruli cerebellares – small eosinophilic corpuscles (correspond to synapses between mossy fibers and dendrites of neurons in granular layer).
  • 40. C. White matter of small brain – forms axis of cerebellar gyri and is made up of myelinized fibers. 62. Medulla spinalis (cross section, HE) A. Pia mater – thin c.t. membrane with numerous blood vessels, which trench fissura mediana anterior. B. Gray matter – has H shape in cross section, central canal lined with ependyma is in the middle of cross commisure. Gray matter divides into: 1. ventral horns (columns) – at the side of fissura mediana anterior, they are wide and rounded and do not reach the surface of spinal cord; ventral horns contain 3 types of neurons: – large motor neurons (anterior horn cells) – star-shaped or polyhedral cells, sized about 150 µm, cells are localized in groups (motor nuclei), – small neurons of horn – diffused in horns, – interneurony, 2. lateral horns (columns) – only in thoracic part of spinal cord, contain 2 types of neurons: small and middle-sized multipolar neurons and interneurons, 3. dorsal horns (columns) – at the side of septum medianum dorsale, horns are slim and reach practically the surface of spinal cord; they contains neurons of 2 types: – neurons of funiculi (cellulae funiculares) – middle-sized multipolar neurons, – interneurons. C. White matter of spinal cord: is divided into 3 funiculi on both sides - anterior, lateral and posterior, they are composed of myelinized nerve fibers and oligodendroglia. 63. Ganglion spinale (parallel section with long axis of ganglion, HE or impregnation) A. Connective tissue: 1. dense c.t. capsule, 2. septa with blood vessels 3. loose c.t. around ganglionic cells. B. Ganglionic cells – are in groups, usually bellow c.t. capsule: 1. ganglionic cells – round or oval pseudounipolar neurons with light vesicular nucleus and granules of lipofuscin in cytoplazm, 2. satelite cells (amficytes) – spindle-shaped cells with dark nuclei, cells form continouous coat around each ganlionic cell C. Bundles of nerve fibers with myelin sheath run throughout middle zone of ganglion.
  • 41. 64. Peripheral nerve (Cross or longitudinal section, HE, luxol blue - myelin, impregnation) Peripheral nerve – cross section A. Nerve c.t. coats: 1. epineurium – surface nerve coat consists of loose c.t., 2. perineurium – surounds each secondary nerve bundle and is made up one to several layers of special flattened cells and collagenous fibers, 3. endoneurium – loose c.t. on the surface of each primary nerve bundle and around each nerve fiber. B. Nerve fibers: most of them are surounded by myelin and Schwann sheaths; in cross section they appear as small circles with dark centres (axons); nuclei of Schwann cells are usually distinct. Peripheral nerve – longitudinal section A. Nerve c.t. coats: see above B. Nerve fibers: fibers are wavy and nuclei of Schwann cells can be identified on their surface; nodes of Ranvier can be found on slides stained with luxol blue.
  • 42. 65. Anterior segment of the eye A. Cornea: 1. anterior epithelium – stratified squamous epithelium, 2. Bowman´s membrane – 6-9 µm thick membrane of homogenous appearance, 3. substantia propria – is composed of collagenous lamelae oriented in paralel way with the surface, amorpheous substance and flattened fibrocytes, 4. Descemet´s membrane – basal lamina of posterior epithelium of corneae, 5. posterior epithelium (endothelium) – simple squamous epithelium of mesenchymal origin. B. Sclerocorneal junction - contains sinus venosus (canal of Schlemm). C. Corpus ciliare – is triangular in section, processus ciliares are prominent on its free surface: 1. connective tissue stroma – highly vascularized, around musculus ciliaris, which is composed of bundles of smooth muscle cells oriented in meridional, radial and circular direction, 2. pars ciliaris retinae – 2 layers of epithelial cells: – outer layer with pigment cells – continuation of stratum pigmenti retinae, – inner layer with columnar cells without pigment – is atteched to the membrana limitans interna. D. Iiris - thin c.t. plate with pupilla in the center, situated between anterior and posterior chamber of the eye. Laeyers of iris: 1. anterior epithelium – endothelium (is dificult to identify it in the slide), 2. anterior limiting (stromal) sheath – condensed c.t. and pigment cells, 3. stroma iridis – yelly-like c.t. with melanocytes and blood vessels, smooth muscle is near pupilla (musculus sphincter pupillae), 4. posterior limiting sheath – is very thin, composed of myoepithelial cells, forming musculus dilatator pupillae, 5. posterior epithelium = pars iridica retinae – layer of columnar highly pigmented cells – continuation of pars ciliaris retinae E. Lens (lens cristallina) – (can be missing in some slides): 1. capsula lentis – homogenous membrane on lens surface, 2. anterior epithelium – cuboid epithelium between capsule ventral side of lens, 3. lens fibers – the most important part of lens.
  • 43. 66. Posterior segment of the eye (Meridional section, HE) A. Sclera: contains thick bundles of collagenous fibers, oriented paralelly with surface of eyeball, network of elastic fibers and elongated fibroblasts. B. Chorioidea: 1. lamina suprachorioidea – thin, avascular layer with lamellar structure, numerous melanocytes 2. lamina vasculosa – loose c.t. with blood arteries and veins; pigmented cells, 3. lamina choriocapillaris – one layer of capillary network, without melanocytes, 4. lamina vitrea (Bruch´s membrane) – not distinc layer, separates choroid and retina. C. Photoreceptive part of retina (pars optica retinae): 1. pigment epithelium (stratum pigmenti retinae) – layer of cuboid cells with pigment melanin , 2. layer of rods and cones – outer segments of photoreceptors, 3. membrana limitans externa – not distinct, 4. outer nuclear layer – nuclei of rods and cons, 5. outer plexiform layer – synapses between 1st and 2nd neuron, 6. inner nuclear layer – bipolar, amacrine and horizontal cells and nuclei of supporting neuroglial cells of Müller, 7. inner plexiform layer – synapses between 2nd and 3rd neuron) + branching of amacrine cell processes, 8. ganglion cells layer – multipolar neurons, 9. layer of nerve fibers – neurits of multipolar cells, blood vessels supplying retina, 10. membrana limitans interna. 67. Palpebra (cross section, HE or HES) A. Ventral side: skin covered with thin epidermis, hair follicles, sweat and sebaceous glands in dermis. B. M. orbicularis oculi – skeletal muscle. C. Tarsal plate: dense c.t. with branched sebaceous glands (gll. tarseae Meibomi). D. Dorsal side: conjunctive (stratified columnar epithelium with goblet cells + lamina propria mucosae – loose c.t. with lymph nodules). Notice: free margin of palpebra contains hair follicles of eyelashes (cilia) with sebaceous glands of Zeiss and apocrine sweat glands of Moll.
  • 44. 68. Auricle Ec = elastic cartilage * = typical thick skin with hair follicles and sebaceous glands 69. Funiculus umbilicalis (cross section, HE or Azan) A. Amnionic ectoderm – simple squamous or cuboid epithelium on the surface of umbilical cord. B. Wharton´s yelly (yelly-like c.t. tissue) – is composed of amorpheous substance, fibrocytes and fine collagenous fibers. C. Umbilical vessels (vasa umbilicalia): 1. arteriae umbilicales – are 2; narrow lumen, circular, longitudinal and spiral smooth muscle cells in the wall, inner and outer elastic membranes are not present, 2. vena umbilicalis – is 1; greater lumen, thiner wall, distinct 3 layers. D. The rest of ductus allantoideus (allantois) – non- constant epithelial islet in the center of triangular region of c.t. among umbilical vessels. 70. Placenta –the end of pregnancy (cross section, HE) A. Pars fetalis placentae: 1. chorionic plate (membrane) - yelly-like c.t. tissue: – amnionic side of plate – smooth, covered with amnionic ectoderm (simple squamous or cuboid epithelium), – hypochorial side of plate - forms chorionic villi, 2. chorionic villi (villi choriales) and intervilous space. Structure of the villus: – syncytiotrophoblast, thin cytoplasmic layer
  • 45. with many nuclei and without cell borders, – stroma of villus – yelly-like c.t. tissue with branches of umbilical vessels. B. Pars materna placentae (basal plate) = zona functionalis of initial decidua basalis: 1. decidual cells – ovoid to polyhedral cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm, 2. cells of cytotrophoblast – surface layer of basal plate. C. Fibrinoid – homogenous or finely granular eosinophilic material on the surface of basal plate, chorionic villi or hypochorial side of chorionic plate.
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