Skeletal muscle
fascia
A whole muscle is surrounded by epimysium, which is type of connective tissue called fascia. If it surrounds a muscle or a functional muscle group, the outer covering of connective tissue (fascia) is called deep fascia.
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.
"I am not sure of names but i know that many cells make up the heart! Try to look on the Internet for your answer. Hope this helped a bit :)" You got to be kidding me... that wasn't helpful at all, but whatever. In the heart you can find: - Myocardiocytes - those are the cells performing the rhytmic contraction of the whole heart. - Endothelial cells - those are the supporting epithelial cells, insulating the chambers of the heart and the veins.
epineurium, perineurium, endoneuriumEpinerium, perineurium, endoneurium.
Muscular
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.
The connective tissue wrappings of skeletal muscles provide structure and support to the muscle fibers, helping them withstand forces generated during muscle contraction. They also facilitate communication between muscle fibers and promote efficient transmission of nerve signals. Additionally, these wrappings play a role in maintaining the overall organization and alignment of muscle fibers within a muscle.
Your tongue is also pure muscle and the strongest muscle in your whole body. It is said that your tongue can lift up 80 times it's own weight.
A whole muscle is the whole muscle while a muscle fiber is part of a muscle. I'm not sure if I'm correct though, so check with some different sources.
Whole human body Organ systems (e.g., cardiovascular system, digestive system) Organs (e.g., heart, liver) Tissues (e.g., muscle tissue, epithelial tissue) Cells (e.g., muscle cells, skin cells) Organelles (e.g., mitochondria, nucleus)
Tissue is found throughout the body, existing in various forms such as epithelial tissue lining organs and cavities, connective tissue providing structure and support, muscle tissue enabling movement, and nervous tissue transmitting electrical signals. These different types of tissue work together to form organs and systems.