The urinary bladder and ureters are lined with transitional epithelium. This tissue allows the bladder to stretch when full and contract when empty. It looks like cuboidal epithelium when the bladder is contracted, and like stratified epithelium when distended.
Several types of cells make up the bladder. Connective tissue cells, epithelial cells, and muscle cells all make up the bladder.
Transitional epithelium, or uroepithelium.
Transitional,Simple cuboidal, Glandular.ect
The bladder mucosa contains two significant cell types: urothelial cells that line the bladder lumen and suburothelial interstitial cells or myofibroblasts.
The bladder epithelium is a special type that stretches with pressure. It is called transitional epithelium.
Transitional cells
transitional
Epithelial
Stratified Squamous Epithelium
Epithelial tissue
Epithelial tissue is classified as a Primary Tissue (as opposed to connective, muscle, or nervous tissues), so it would be throughout the body. Many of the body's glands are made up of epithelial tissue.
Epithelial tissue that is only one cell thick is known as simple cuboidal epithelium. The epithelial tissue that is found in glands are glandular.
In the lining of the respiratory tract.
Epithelial
Some examples of epithelial tissue are: Simple squamous (found lining the blood vessels), simple cuboidal (lines kidney tubules), Pseudostratified columnar (lines the respiratory passage), and transitional (inner lining of urinary bladder).
The Mucosa tissue and the goblet cells are the type of tissue that are found in the inner lining of the stomach.
A ciliated epithelial cell is can be found in the esophagus, trachea, or even lining the inner wall of the intestine
Stratified Squamous Epithelium
Stratified squamus keratinized
They include: Connective tissue, Muscle tissue and Nervous tissue. The other one is Epithelial tissue, which covers the body surface and forms the lining for most internal cavities..
Epithelial tissue
Epithelial tissue is found throughout the body in your skin, organs and cells.
Transitional epithelium is found in areas that are subject to considerable stretching. Tissue in the bladder, urethra, ureters, an prostate often expand and contract.
Urinary bladder and ureter.