Connective tissue is made of cells, and cells do not contain other cells (if they are healthy; bacterial infection would be an exception). Cells do contain structural elements that connect them to other cells, but that is not the same thing as connective tissue.
yes but depends on where they are
No. These are the cells that make up most of the liver's tissue and preform specialized liver functions. They contain organelles.
endocrine glands are epithelial cells embedded within connective tissue.
Reticular connective tissue
It is the connective tissue capsule covering the liver with its vessels
hepatic is i think how you spell it, connective, and simple cuboidal epithal?
Liver cells...
Capsule
Cirrhosis of the liver involves the replacement of healthy liver cells with scar tissue.
Because blood vessels are embedded in the pancreas and liver
Because blood vessels are embedded in the pancreas and liver
Adipose (fat) tissue. Fat can also be deposited in muscle; with a disease such as muscular dystrophy or on organs like the liver with liver damage. There is a type of fat (brown) which exists on or around internal organs, and subcutaneous fat which is underneath the the out layers of skin.