No, there are four types of tissue; muscular, epithelial, connective and nervous tissue. Neurons are categorised in the nervous tissue.
The brain primarily consists of nervous tissue, which includes neurons and glial cells. Additionally, the brain contains some connective tissue that supports and protects the nervous tissue, as well as blood vessels that supply nutrients and oxygen to the brain cells.
The main cell type found in nervous tissue is the neuron. Neurons are responsible for transmitting electrical signals within the nervous system and are specialized for communication through both electrical and chemical signals.
Yes. The brain is composed of two kinds of nerve cells neurons (which are either afferent, interneurons, or efferent) and neuroglia (which has several subtypes).
The cell type that is not found in the areolar connective tissue is chondrocytes. The three main components of connective tissue are ground substance, fibers, and cells.
mucoid connective tissue (Wharton jelly)areolar (?)
Elastic Connective Tissue
What kind of tissue is found in the jaw bone, epithelial connective nerve or muscle?The kind of tissue found in the jaw bone is connective tissue.
connective tissue
elastic connective tissue is found in the lungs. The tissue is able to extend when forces are applied to stretch it, yet returned undamaged to its previous condition when the force is released.
neurons (brain cells) & neuroglia (support)---------------------------------------------------Multipolar Neurons (3+ processes) They are the most common neuron type in humans (more than 99% of neurons belong to this class) and the major neuron type in the CNS Bipolar Neurons Bipolar neurons are spindle-shaped, with a dendrite at one end and an axon at the other . An example can be found in the light-sensitive retina of the eye. Unipolar Neurons Sensory neurons have only a single process or fibre which divides close to the cell body into two main branches (axon and dendrite). Because of their structure they are often referred to as unipolar neurons.
No, loose connective tissue does not contain chondrocytes. Chondrocytes are specialized cells found in cartilage tissue, not in loose connective tissue. Loose connective tissue primarily consists of collagen and elastin fibers, along with various cells such as fibroblasts and macrophages.
Simple receptors found in epithelia and connective tissue tend to detect physical stimuli such as pressure, touch, and temperature changes. They send sensory information to the brain via sensory neurons to help in the perception of the external environment.