true
No, fat is not stored in spongy bone. The majority of fat in the body is stored in adipose tissue, which is a type of connective tissue located beneath the skin and around internal organs. Spongy bone is a type of bone tissue that contains bone marrow, not fat.
A tissue called adipose tissue stores fat. It can be found in many places: under the skin, as padding in some joints, behind the eye, as an "apron" (omentum) over the intestines.
Long bones contain yellow marrow in addition to red marrow. Yellow marrow is stored fat, or adipose tissue.
The soft tissue that fills spaces in spongy bone is marrow.
Fat is stored in all bones that consist of yellow bone marrow.
The type of marrow that is made up primarily of fat cells is the yellow bone marrow. The red bone marrow is made up of myeloids.
yellow
Red bone marrow tissue is hematopoietic, meaning it is responsible for producing blood cells. Yellow bone marrow tissue, on the other hand, is primarily composed of fat cells and is not involved in the production of blood cells.
The soft tissue inside of the bone is called "marrow."
Fat, also called adipose tissue when it is stored in the body, can be found in the medullary cavity of long bones as yellow bone marrow.
The soft tissue at the center of bones is known as bone marrow. It is responsible for producing blood cells and storing fat.
The tissue in the central canal of bone that consists chiefly of fat cells is called yellow bone marrow. Yellow bone marrow serves as a storage site for fats and can also convert into red bone marrow to produce red blood cells when needed.