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B. Skeletal. i think tht i spelt it right
Because it lacks striations the muscle appears to look very smooth under a microscope.
Because it lacks striations the muscle appears to look very smooth under a microscope.
Cardiac muscle is made up of striated uninucleated cells. These cells have a single nucleus and are arranged in a striated pattern, giving them a striped appearance under a microscope.
Muscle tissue under the skin appears as firm, often striated (striped) tissue with a reddish or pink hue due to blood flow. The thickness and definition of the muscle can vary depending on individual muscle development and body composition.
The smooth muscles
Two types of muscle in the human body are striated muscle. Striated means "striped" and is the type of muscle that moves the body. Smooth muscle does not have the striped appearance and is not under conscious control.
Smooth muscles do not have stripes, unlike skeletal and cardiac muscles which have a striped appearance under a microscope. Smooth muscles are found in walls of internal organs and blood vessels and are responsible for involuntary movements.
Hi this is an advert for an advert, if you would like to advertise visit, advert@advert.advert.advert.com for all your advert needs! They are both striated muscles, and are both not tapered at the ends.
Smooth muscle is the type of muscle that is not striped (striated) and is under involuntary control. It is found in various organs such as the digestive system, blood vessels, and the respiratory system. Smooth muscle contracts and relaxes in response to various stimuli without conscious effort.
The first man to witness a live cell under a microscope was Anton Van Leeuwenhoek in 1674 AD
The striations in muscle fibers are caused by the arrangement of contractile proteins within the fibers. These proteins, primarily actin and myosin, overlap and interlock in a regular pattern, giving the muscle fibers a striped appearance when viewed under a microscope.
If you move a specimen under a microscope to the left, it appears to move to the right when looking through the lens because the view is inverted and reversed on the microscope slide.