Smooth muscle
myometrium
The layer around a cell is called a membrane.
Digestive tract is made up of four layers . 1 serosa is outer layer . 2 Muscle layer is second part. 3 sub mucosa is third layer . 4 mucosa is the inner most layer .
Epicranius Muscle
This is the fascia, which is actually composed of three separate levels. There is one layer that wraps around each muscle fiber, another layer that wraps around each muscle bundle and then a final layer that wraps around the whole muscle.
The outermost layer of connective tissue that surrounds muscle is called the epimysium. It is a layer of dense irregular connective tissue that surrounds the entire muscle and separates it from surrounding tissues and organs. The epimysium is continuous with the tendons at the end of the muscle and helps to transmit the force generated by the muscle to the bone or other structures to which it is attached.
A muscle is made of tiny fibers. First it starts with one fiber that is surrounded by a layer of endomysium (connective tissue). Next a few more single strands of fibers are added to this one and wrapped around that is a layer of perimysium. this group of fibers is called a fasicle. then a bunch more fasicles get added to this one and is surrounded by a layer of epimysium. this creates the entire skeletal muscle.
The muscle layer of the heart is the myocardium (or cardiac muscle).
Because it's Phat. Word.
The epimysium muscle surrounds the outermost layer of the entire muscle. The muscle is composed of cells known as muscle fibers.
Muscle fiber is another name for muscle cell. And each one is wrapped in connective tissue that is called endomysium.
the radial layer
Several sheaths of connective tissue hold the fibers of a skeletal muscle together. These sheaths from internal to external are the first layer is the endomysium (within the muscle), the second is a layer of fibrous connective tissue called perimysium (around the muscle) and the third is the epimysium , a name that means “outside the muscle.
It's the heart
mucosa, thick layer of circulas muscle, thin layer of longitudinal muscle, serosa
The term used to describe the outer layer of a muscle is the epimysium.