There is only one type called fascia. It has different names depending on its location. The three are: endomysium, perimysium, and epimysium.
epimysium - surrounds muscle
perimysium - surrouns fasicle
endomysium - surrounds fibre
Epimysium, perimysium, and endomysium
Musculo-skeletal Tissue
three reasons why the connective tissue wrappings of skeletal muscle are important
muscle, connective, or skeletal
Perimysium is the connective tissue that divides the muscle into fascicles.
The biceps include both skeletal muscle tissue and connective tissue. The skeletal muscle tissue is responsible for the movement of the biceps, while the connective tissue helps to support and stabilize the muscle fibers.
Endomysium
Connective tissue is one which is rich in intercellular substance or interlacing processes with little tendency for the cells to come together in sheets or masses. Aponeuroses is the connective tissue that connect muscles to muscles . Tendons connect skeletal muscles to bones.
skeletal
Feumirstic, Skeletal, Ligimentistical
Several sheaths of connective tissue hold the fibers of a skeletal muscle together. These sheaths from internal to external are the first layer is the endomysium (within the muscle), the second is a layer of fibrous connective tissue called perimysium (around the muscle) and the third is the epimysium , a name that means “outside the muscle.
The layers of connective tissue function as protection and covering for muscle fibers. Its three types are epimysium, perimysium and endomysium.
endomysium