No, it is not skin, but a membrane that is found lining all parts of the body that are internal but with an outside exit. These include your entire digestive tract, upper respiratory tract, and urinary/reproductive tracts. This membrane produces mucous and you make plenty of it when you have a upper respiratory infection like a cold.
No, the skin is non-haematopoietic tissue.
In the skin, the fat layer is called the subcutaneous tissue or adipose tissue.
The surface of your skin is primarily made up of epithelial tissue, not connective tissue. Connective tissue is found beneath the surface of the skin and plays a supportive role in providing structure and strength to the skin.
The layer of tissue that becomes the nervous tissue and skin is called the ectoderm.
Epithelial tissue covers and protects underlying tissue.
Passing vaginal tissue means that the tissue around the opening of the vagina is coming out. This could occur during a miscarriage.
Squamous epithelial tissue covers surfaces subjected to medhcanical or chemical stress. Examples are the skin, mouth lining, and vaginal lining.
Menstrual flow consists mainly of uterine cells, uterine tissue and blood. Menstrual flow will also contain vaginal discharge, cervical mucus, and vaginal skin cells that are carried along by the menstrual flow as it passes through the vaginal canal.
Vaginal stenosis-- Narrowing of the vagina due to a build-up of scar tissue.
Adipose tissue is deep to the skin; skin is superficial to adipose tissue. Adipose tissue is fat.
Ordinary pressure steam scalds the skin and tissue, and whilst condensing causes further heat insult. Superheated steam acts like a thermal lance and cuts into the tissue as well as scalding and burning deep tissue.
vulva
The scientific name for skin tissue is dermis. The epidermis is the top layer of the skin, and the dermis is underneath that.
Connective tissue of the skin is developed from?
Skin is not a tissue, it is an organ. It is the largest organ in the body in fact. When we speak of skin tissue we're actually referring to the multiple layers of ectodermal tissue that constitute skin.
No, the skin is non-haematopoietic tissue.
Epidermis is what your skin tissue is called.