smooth tissue
Smooth muscle that makes up the internal organs, mostly found in the gastrointestinal tract
Smooth muscle that makes up the internal organs, mostly found in the gastrointestinal tract.
The kind of tissue that makes up contracting organs is muscle tissue: cardiac, smooth and skeletal muscle.
Internal organs usually do not move. Unless you mean the contraction of the heart, which is composed of cardiomyocytes. If you have experienced some strange movement of other organs you should contact your doctor.
Smooth muscle, which makes up internal organs, is non-striated and is generally involuntary.
Muscle Tissue
The muscle tissue
The tissue that makes up organs that are able to contract or shorten is known as muscle tissue. Muscle tissue is composed of muscle cells that contain protein filaments that slide past each other, causing the muscle to contract and generate force. There are three types of muscle tissue: skeletal, cardiac, and smooth.
Smooth muscle (which is not striated)
Muscle tissue. Cardiac: the muscles in or related to the heart Skeletal: muscles that you can voluntarily control, such as your biceps Smooth: muscles in or around your organs, which cannot be voluntarily controlled (ie. the muscles in your stomach or intestines)
cell-tissue-organs. :]
Organs are made up of various types of tissues, including epithelial, connective, muscle, and nervous tissue. Epithelial tissue covers the surfaces of organs, connective tissue provides structure and support, muscle tissue allows for movement, and nervous tissue enables communication and control. Each organ contains a combination of these different tissue types that work together to carry out specific functions.