Histology Flashcards
What is the initial part of the nasal cavity lined by?
keratinised stratified squamous epithelium
What is lost deeper into the nasal cavity?
keratin
What is respiratory epithelium?
pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium with goblet cells
What is under the respiratory epithelium?
lamina propria - a band of connective tissue containingseromucous glands
What lines the oropharnyx and the epiglottis?
non-keratinized stratified squamous epithelium - allows it to resist abrasion
What lines the Larynx?
The walls are made up of cartilage and muscles with respiratory epithelium lining its surfaces with the exception of the vocal folds and adjacent structures
What are the vocal folds and adjacent structures covered with?
stratified squamous epithelium
What are the c shaped cartilages of the trachea lined with?
contains 15-20 ‘C’ shaped cartilages
The open side of the ‘C’ of the cartilage is spanned by fibroelastic tissue and smooth muscle
What is the wall of the trachea lined with?
lining of respiratory epithelium backed by a basal lamina, a lamina propria of connective tissue with abundant elastic fibres and a submucosa of connective tissue that includes numerous seromucous glands
What is the wall of the bronchus made up of?
respiratory epithelium, a lamina propria, a muscularis consisting of a ring ofsmooth muscle and a submucosa with adipose tissue and some seromucous glands
What are terminal bronchioles lined with?
cuboidal ciliated epithelium and contain non-ciliated club cells
What are terminal bronchioles?
The smallest bronchioles that lack respiratory function
Describe type 1 alveolar cells?
simple squamous epithelium that lines the alveolar surfaces
These cells provide a barrier of minimal thickness that is permeable to gases
- cover 90% of surfaces
Desribe type 2 alveolar cells?
polygonal in shape
the free surface is covered by microvilli and the cytoplasm displays dense membrane bound lamellar bodies which contain surfactant.
The surfactant is released by exocytosis and spreads over the pulmonary surface to reduce the surface tension at the air-fluid interface. This reduces the tendency for the alveoli to collapse at the end of expiration
What are alveolar macrophages?
present in alveoli
free cells phagocytosing inhaled particles that may have escaped entrapment by the mucous lining of the airway