Yes, dentin is a layer of connective tissue that acts as a barrier to protect the pulp.
yes
Epithelium is the connective tissue in a frog that lines the organs. It covers the internal organs and forms a protective barrier.
the connective tissues protects the fat, bone, cartilage and alot more
connective tissue
The tissue of the spleen is reticular connective tissue.
Connective tissue has an extracellular matrix
Epineurium is the connective tissue surrounding a peripheral nerve.
a. loose connective tissue 1. aerolalar connective tissue 2.adipose tissue 3.retigular connective tissue b. Dense connective tissue 1.dense irregular connective tissue 2.dense regular connective tissue 3.elastic connective tissue
No dentin is not vascular tissue. I think your question should possibly be is dentin vascular, as in does it have a blood supply. The answer is yes to a certain extent, although the tissue type itself is a specialised, mineralised connective tissue. Although it is related to the pulp as they are both derived from the dental papilla. It is supplied nutrients through the odontoblast cell body layer which lines the interior of the pulp chamber through the odontoblastic processes (tomes fibers) that project from the cell bodies well into the dentinal layer. These processes are contained within the dentinal tubules. So although they are linked dentin itself is not described as a vascular tissue... but it is vascular compared to a tissue such as cementum which is avascular.
Connective Tissue, because it's formed from the same embryonic layer as other connective tissues.
Connective tissue
No. They are not connective tissue.