heart
Striated muscle tissue is muscle tissue that has repeating tubular muscle cells. Striated muscles include skeletal striated muscle, embryotic branchiomeric muscle, and cardiac muscle.
Cardiac Muscle is smooth but looks striated
Cardiac and skeletal
cardiac muscle
involuntary and striated
Cardiac muscle is a type of muscle tissue that is both striated and involuntary. Cardiac muscle is found in the heart.
The tissue which makes up cardiac muscle has striations present. The heart, which is made up of special cardiac muscle is composed of lots of branching cells that join into a continuous mass by intercalated discs. Cardiac muscle is also known as striated involuntary muscle. This cardiac muscle tissue forms the bulk of the heart walls of each chamber. The striations in cardiac muscle are irregular, but they are present. Striated muscle is also found in skeltal muscle tissue, skeletal muscle tissue unlike cardiac muscle tissue has a regular striated structure which you can easily see through histolgy.
The tissue you are describing is cardiac muscle tissue. It is found in the heart and its cells are striated (have bands) and connected by intercalated discs, allowing them to contract in sync and pump blood effectively.
Heart has cardiac tissue. It is striated like skeletal muscle, but is under control of the autonomic nervous system.
Cardiac muscle tissue is involuntarily controlled and has branching striated cells. It is found in the heart and is responsible for pumping blood throughout the body.
No. Smooth muscle and cardiac muscle are two different types of muscle tissue. Smooth muscle does not have striations (or stripes) and is located in the organs. Cardiac muscle is striated (has stripes) and fits together with gap junctions that allow for quick passage.
The heart is made of smooth and cardiac muscle