The cheek cells are stratified squamous.
What is epithelial?
Your esophagus is constantly scraped by rough food. This is the type of cell that lines it. (You need the full description)
What is stratified squamous?
This tissue is found throughout the body is responsible for delivering oxygen and removing carbon dioxide.
What is blood?
This tissue moves bones.
What is skeletal muscle?
This type of healing will produce a scar
What is fibrosis?
Cells in the lung are flat and thin (simple squamous), which is best for gas exchange.
What is epithelial?
This type of cell is found in the respiratory tract to move mucus along with hair-like projections. It looks like stratified but is not.
What is ciliated pseudostratified columnar?
This tissue has a tree-ring appearance. It is organized into these structural units to maximize strength.
What is bone?
This tissue is striated and involuntary.
What is cardiac?
This is the first stage of healing where the point is to stop the bleeding.
What is hemostasis?
A tendon or ligament. (Reminder, just the main four tissues)
What is connective?
This is the single layer cell that also contains goblet cells that secrete mucus.
What is simple columnar?
This tissue connects bone to muscle.
What is a tendon?
This type of cell transmits signals.
What are neurons?
This is the last stage of tissue repair.
What is remodeling?
Blood
What is connective tissue?
What is apical?
This cartilage is found in between the vertebrae of the spine.
What is fibrocartilage?
This enables powerful contractions for muscles and also gives the tissue a "striped" appearance.
What are striations?
This is where the skin gets red and swollen, but it's actually a good thing because macrophages are at work trying to clean the wound.
What is inflammation?
Non-striated and involuntary cells (known as smooth) found in the digestive system.
What is muscle?
You don't bleed when you shave. This is because the epithelial layer is ...
What is avascular?
This tissue binds skin to underlying organs and forms membranes.
What is loose or areolar tissue?
The support cells of the nervous system.
What are neuroglia?
This is the stage where granulation tissue appears.
What is proliferation?