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Pseudostratified. The bladder is the only organ with that type of tissue. The answer above is wrong! the urinary bladder is composed of transitional epithelium with an underlying connective tissue. the transitional epithelium allows the bladder t expand in order to fill it with urine and relax when urine is released.
Urinary Bladder
there are binucleated cells in the liver and in the transitional epithelium of the urinary bladder
the ureter has three layers, transitional epithelium is one of them. the bladder also has transitional epithelium. In the urethra near the bladder it becomes transitional epithelium also. For those of you at Paris jr college, you can fine the on page 986-987 the 8th edition for A & P.
No. It is the opposite. The bladder is part of the urinary system. Since the bladder is an organ it can't be a system. A system is made of several organs.
No.
In areas subject to stretching such as urinary bladder.Urinary bladderLinning of the urinary bladder
transitional epithelium
Pseudostratified. The bladder is the only organ with that type of tissue. The answer above is wrong! the urinary bladder is composed of transitional epithelium with an underlying connective tissue. the transitional epithelium allows the bladder t expand in order to fill it with urine and relax when urine is released.
The tissues are called epithelium, which are made of epithelial cells. There are different types of epithelium. In the urinary bladder, the cells are transitional epithelium, which allows it to stretch and shrink.
rugae and transitional epithelium
transitional epithelium
Urinary Bladder
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.
there are binucleated cells in the liver and in the transitional epithelium of the urinary bladder
the ureter has three layers, transitional epithelium is one of them. the bladder also has transitional epithelium. In the urethra near the bladder it becomes transitional epithelium also. For those of you at Paris jr college, you can fine the on page 986-987 the 8th edition for A & P.
No. It is the opposite. The bladder is part of the urinary system. Since the bladder is an organ it can't be a system. A system is made of several organs.