An organ sytem includes tissues.
The difference between organ system and tissue is that organs are made of many layers of tissue working together and a organ system is many organs working together as a system.
The difference between organ system and tissue is that organs are made of many layers of tissue working together and a organ system is many organs working together as a system.
A tissue is what you blow your nose into and an organ is something in your body that has a specific vital function.
The code in the Musculoskeletal System subsection is associated with deep tissue possibly to the bone.
It is similar to difference between Head and Hair !
the difference between tissues and organs is that the tissues make up the organs and the tissues are made up of cells.
The recipient's immune system will detect the difference between the two sets of antigen and start a rejection response to kill the donated tissue.
because i hate it
Nervous tissue is made up of different cells working together to perform a given function -- in this case, to carry messages from one part of the body to another. Different nervous tissues working together make up nervous system organs, such as nerves, the spinal cord, or the brain. These organs work together in the nervous system, a collection of organs performing a body function. So, in sum, the difference between nervous tissue and the nervous system is one of size and scope: nervous tissue makes up nervous organs, which make up the nervous system.
A organ is a type of a keyboard instrament like a piano and a tissue is a thing you sneeze in.
Cancellous tissue has spaces inside it, like a honeycomb. Compact tissue is solid and dense with no visible spaces.
The vascular tissue system comprised of the xylem and phloem function mainly for conduction of water and dissolved minerals (xylem), as well as conduction of carbohydrates, primarily sucrose, for the plant to use as food. The ground tissue system which consists of cubic or round cells with thin walls and living protoplasts, functions as aid in photosynthesis, storage, and secretion.