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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Human histology
- Cells
- Haematoxylin & eosin stains
- Cell structure
- Tissues
- Tissues, organs & systems
- Four primary tissues
- Epithelial tissue
- Epithelial tissue - classification
- Simple epithelium - types
- Simple squamous epithelium
- Simple cuboidal epithelium
- Simple columnar epithelium
- Ciliated columnar epithelium
- Goblet cells
- Pseudostratified epithelium
- Stratified epithelium
- Stratified cuboidal epithelium
- Stratified columnar epithelium
- Stratified squamous epithelium
- Stratified squamous epithelium
- Transitional epithelium
- Seminiferous epithelium
- Glandular epithelium
- Exocrine glands – acinar units
- Exocrine glands – modes of secretion
- Endocrine glands
- Connective tissue
- Connective tissue types
- Connective tissue – components
- Connective tissue – resident cells
- Connective tissue – migrant cells
- Connective tissue – intercellular substance
- Loose areolar tissue
- Dense fibrous tissue
- Adipose tissue
- Cartilage
- Hyaline cartilage
- White fibrocartilage
- Yellow elastic cartilage
- Bone
- Blood & lymph
- Myxomatous tissue
- Muscular tissue
- Voluntary muscle
- Smooth muscle
- Cardiac muscle
- Nervous tissue
- Neurons
- Neurons - types
- Multipolar neurons
- Bipolar neurons
- Unipolar neurons
- Neuroglia
- Neuroglial cells – types
- Gastrointestinal tract
- Gastrointestinal tract – oesophagus structure
- Gastrointestinal tract – stomach structure
- Gastrointestinal tract – small intestine structure
- Large intestine
- Liver & gall bladder
- Pancreas
- Respiratory tract
- Urinary tract – kidney
- Urinary tract – ureter & bladder
- Blood vessels – arteries
- Blood vessels – veins
- Lymphoid tissue – lymph node & spleen
- Lymphoid tissue – tonsil & thymus
- Male genital tract – testis & epididymis
- Male genital tract – vas deferens & prostate
- Female genital tract
- Endocrines – pituitary, thyroid & parathyroid glands
- Endocrines – adrenal gland & islets of Langerhans
- Summary
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- Histological stains
- Cells, tissue and organ structure
- Types of epithelium
- Types of secretory cells
- Exocrine & endocrine glands
- Connective tissue types & structure
- Cartilage types & structure
- Muscle types & structure
- Neuron types
- Gastrointestinal tract
- Respiratory tract
- Genitourinary tract
Talk Citation
Banumathy, S.P. (2023, April 30). Introduction to human histology [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 26, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/WHGY2708.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- There are no commercial/financial matters to disclose.
A selection of talks on Cancer
Transcript
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0:00
I am Dr. Banumathy,
an anatomist from
Madurai Tamilnadu India.
The topic for today is
Introduction to Human Histology.
0:13
Histology is the study of
the human body with the
help of a microscope.
Hence, it is also called
microscopic anatomy
or microanatomy.
0:24
The structural and
functional units of
the human body are the cells.
The body is made up of billions
and billions of cells.
Each cell has a
nucleus surrounded by
cytoplasm and bounded
by a cell membrane.
0:41
The details of the
cell cannot be clearly
made out when kept
under the microscope,
so stains are used
to study the different
components of a cell.
The commonly used stains
are hematoxylin and eosin.
Haematoxylin is a basic stain,
nucleus-basophilic, and
hence, stained blue.
Eosin is an acidic stain,
made part of the cytoplasm is
acidophilic and
hence, stained pink;
1:13
the cells vary in size,
shape, and function.
They can be small or large,
cubical or columnar,
round or oval,
spindle shaped, or star-shaped.
The size of the
nucleus also varies.
It can be spherical or oval,
compressed or lobed,
central or eccentric
in position.
The cytoplasm can be smooth,
striated, or granular.
The intercellular
substances also varies.
Homogeneous,
amorphous, granular,
crystalline, mucoid, or fluid.