Department Images 98 - 151 (Dustin) Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Department Images 98 - 151 (Dustin) Deck (53)
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1
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

(really difficult without seeing more of the lumen)

A

Esophagus

contains inner circular and outer tongitudinal muscles layers with skeletal muscle interspersed throughout

epithelium is stratified squamous non-keratinized

2
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

A

Stomach Cardia

Near the esophageal-gastric junction, the bottom part of the image has strat squam non-keratinizing epithelium

3
Q

Which tissue is this slide taken from?

A

Fundus of Stomach

Has many different kinds of cells in the gastric pits: know mucus neck cells, parietal cells, chief cells

One protruding fold of cells is called a plica villosa, surrounded on either side by gastric pits

4
Q

What tissue is this from?

What stain? What is the purpose of this stain?

A

Fundus of Stomach

PAS-Congo-Hematoxylin stain

Makes mucus (both surface and neck) cells purple as they are PAS positive

Parietal cells turn orange

Chief cells become basophilic / grey

5
Q

What cells here are orange?

Which ones are red?

A

Orange = Parietal Cells

Red = Mucus Neck Cells

6
Q

What are the orange cells?

What are the greyer/ basophilic cells more at the top of the image?

What are the redder cells at the bottom of the image?

A

Orange = Parietal Cells

Greyer/basophilic = Chief Cells

Redder = Mucus Neck Cells

All in the gastric glands of stomach fundus

7
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

A

Pylorus of Stomach

has branched tubular glands, almost entirely mucus secreting cells, stained poorly

8
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

What major structures do you see?

A

Pylorus of Stomach

See Gastric Pits, and below are Pyloric Glands - not to be confused with Brunner’s glands of the duodenum which are in the tela submucosa

9
Q

What is the large fold you see curving rightward in the lower half of the image?

What tissue is this slide from?

A

Plica Circularis aka Fold of Kerckring

Slide is from Jejunum

(no Peyer’s Patches or Brunner’s Glands)

10
Q

What do you call the protruding fold of cells that makes up most of the image?

A

Intestinal Villi

11
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

What stain?

(not a typical slide)

A

Jejunum

Indian Ink

(book says it demonstrates the blood vessels of the villus)

12
Q

What are the cells with reddish granules at the base of the crypt?

Where do these exist in the GI tract?

A

Paneth Cells

Exist only in small intestine crypts of Lieberkuhn

13
Q

What do you call the lighter thing sandwiched between the two darker eosinophilic structures?

A

Myenteric Plexus (of Auerbach)

Takes place between the inner circular and outer longitudinal smooth muscle layers of the GI tract

14
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

A

Duodenum

Have typical small intestine structures + Brunner’s Glands in the tela submucosa

15
Q

What type of glands are at the bottom of the image?

What tissue is this slide from?

A

Brunner’s Submucosal Glands

From the Duodenum

16
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

What are the large purple areas in the middle?

A

Ileum

Purple areas = Peyer’s Patches

17
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

A

Colon

Crypts of Lieberkuhn with a bunch of goblet cells and no villi

18
Q

What tissue is this slide from?

A

Appendix

Has secondary follicles, NOT Peyer’s Patches

Many goblet cells, few/short crypts, no teniae

19
Q

What tissue is this image from?

What stain?

What is the majority of the blue stuff in the image?

A

Pig Liver (Azan)

Blue = interlobular connective tissue that clearly separates the hepatic lobules, and in some corners between lobules you see the (Glisson’s) portal triad of interlobular bile duct, vein, and artery

20
Q

What 3 important vessels do you see here?

What is the combination of them called?

What stain?

A

Interlobular Bile Duct: Simple cuboidal-columnar epithelium

Interlobular Artery/arteriole: thick-walled, small diameter.

Interlobular Vein/venule: largest diameter vessel here, typical thin wall

All 3 together = portal triad

Azan Stain

21
Q

What organ is this from?

What stain?

What does this stain show?

A

Liver, India Ink Injection

Shows vascular pattern / Kupffer cells

22
Q

What liver structure is this image focused on?

A

Portal Triad again

Really only the interlobular veins/venules are clear

23
Q

What 3 important vessels do you see here?

A

Portal Triad again

This time all 3 are very clearly here

24
Q

What type of cells are here?

A

Hepatocytes

Make up liver sinusoids, lined with Kupffer Cells which are generally not visible with an H-E stain like this

25
Q

What tissue is this?

What stain? What does that stain show?

A

Liver

Best’s Carmine Staining

Stains glycogen granules as red

You know liver got that glycogen

26
Q

What organ is this?

What stain?

What animal is it from?

What does the stain show?

A

Liver

Golgi silver impregnation stain

Pigeon (that was stressed for some reason)

Stain shows the bile capillaries between hepatocytes. Note that there are Hering ducts at the periphery of hepatic lobules, but I don’t think you can see them

27
Q

What organ is this from?

What kind of epithelium?

What is unique about its layers?

A

Gall Bladder

Simple Columnar with Cuticle

Has no lamina muscularis mucosa or submucosa

28
Q

What organ is this from?

What are most of the cells you see?

What is the lighter cluster at the top-right of the image?

A

Pancreas

Most cells are serous acini (exocrine)

Lighter area = Islets of Langerhans (endocrine function)

Note there are also NO salivary ducts or adipose tissue, how you can differentiate from Lacrimal and Parotid Glands

29
Q

What type of cells are these?

What organ are they from?

A

Serous acini of Pancreas

Pretty bitchy question without more context, but pancreatic serous acini are supposed to be more acidophilic and have a narrower lumen

30
Q

What organ is this from?

Be able to identify many regions, I’m not gonna label it here

Note also the epithelium transitioning

A

Larynx - Frontal Section

Epithelium everywhere except the vocal folds should be Respiratory (pseudostratified columnar ciliated)

In vocal folds it is stratified squamous non-keratinizing

31
Q

Where in the body is this slide from?

What type of epithelium?

What type of tissue makes up the left half of the image?

A

Trachea

Pseudostratified Columnar Ciliated (Respiratory Epithelium)

Left half = Hyaline (Tracheal) cartilage

32
Q

What organ is this image from?

1, 2, and 3?

What is the mostly white space between 3 and 3?

A

Lung

1: Bronchus because it has respiratory epithelium and cartilage
2: Bronchiolus because of smooth muscle
3: A pulmonary artery

Between 2 and 3: Alveoli

33
Q

What type of airway is the most prominent in this image?

(the big one with the irregular dark lumen)

A

Terminal Bronchioles

Epithelium becomes simple cuboidal (mostly Club/Clara cells) non-ciliated with no goblet cells

Should probably say Club cells and not Clara cells because Clara was a nazi, and you don’t like nazis, do you?

34
Q

What type of airway is this?

A

Alveolar Sac with Alveoli

Look for the Type I and Type II Pneumocytes

35
Q

What tissue is this?

What stain? What does it show?

A

Lung

India Ink - shows pulmonary capillary network

36
Q

What organ is this?

What stain? What does it show?

A

Lung

Resorcin Fuchsin - shows elastic fibers of the pulmonary connective tissue

37
Q

What organ is this from? And what part of that organ?

What are the round things you see? What are the 2 layers of those things?

A

Kidney - Cortex

Round stuff = Renal / Malpighian Corpuscles, which contain Bowman’s capsule and glomerulus

Bowman’s Capsule has 2 layers:

Parietal (simp squam epith)

Visceral (podocytes)

38
Q

What organ is this from?

What stain?

A

Kidney

India Ink: shows the vascular pattern, staining the interlobular arteries and glomerulus

39
Q

What organ is this?

There are some labeled things on the answer card, be able to know where all of them are on this image

A

Kidney (Cortex)

Note: macula densa is a modified part of distal convoluted tubule (DCT) situated at the vascular pole of the renal corpuscle. Has darker cells, more nuclei

The DCT have simple cuboidal epithelium with a wider, regular, rounder lumen than the PCT, and DCT lumen has no brush border

40
Q

From the top, what is the first labeled duct?

Second? Third?

Where is this sample from?

A

1st = Thick Limb of Henle Loop

2nd = Thin Limb of Henle Loop

3rd = Collecting Duct

(I think, anyway..)

This is from outer medulla of kidney

41
Q

What organ is this from?

What type of epithelium?

Be able to name layers

A

Urinary Bladder

Transitional Epithelium

(Esophagus can look similar, the umbrella cells are clear in this one though)

42
Q

What organ?

1 - 5?

A

Testis

  1. Convoluted Seminiferous Tubule (make sure you say convoluted!)
  2. Leydig Cells - large polygonal cells with acidophilic cytoplasm, pale nucleus, visible nuceolus
  3. Sertoli Cell - pale conical nucleus, prominent nucleolus
  4. Spermatogonium (closer to the wall of the tubule) and Primary Spermatocyte
  5. Secondary Spermatocyte
43
Q

What organ?

What stain?

Be able to identify the types of cells

A

Testis in a Convoluted Seminiferous Tubule

Iron Hematoxylin

Gotta know different types of cells in spermiogenesis

(Outer layer of squamous-looking cells around a seminiferous tubule = Lamina Limitans)

44
Q

What organ?

What is 1?

What’s the tubule above #1?

What stain?

A

Mediastinum Testis

1. Rete Testis of Haller

The tubule above #1 is probably a straight seminiferous tubule (tubuli seminiferi recti)

Iron Hematoxylin Stain

45
Q

What tissue is this image from?

What type of vessels make up the top half of the image?

and the bottom half?

A

Epididymis

Top half = Ductus Epididymis - note the pseudostratified columnar epithelium, with stereocilia

Bottom half = Ductus Efferentes Testis with characteristic alternating cell height, simple cuboidal and simple/psuedostratified columnar epithelium, with microvilli, and kinocilia

46
Q

What type of vessel is this?

A

Ductus efferentes testis

47
Q

What vessel is this?

What type of epithelium?

A

Ductus Epididymis

Pseudostratified Columnar Ciliated

48
Q

What tissue is this from?

What’s the huge vessel in the middle? (you also should be aware of its layers) & What kind of Epithelium?

What’s the smaller (but still pretty big) vessel in the top-right of the image?

A

Spermatic Cord

Big thing - Ductus (or Vas) Deferens, with pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelium and 3 muscular layers

Top-right vessel - Deferential Artery, should always be near the ductus deferens

49
Q

Which tissue is this image from?

A

Seminal Vesicle

Looks similar to the ampulla of the oviduct, especially without more in the frame

50
Q

What type of epithelium is here?

What organ is this from?

A

Simple Cuboidal to Columnar Epithelium

(it’s variable in this organ, depending on testosterone level. Our green histo book p. 162 says simple cuboidal to simple columnar, but other sources say it’s more between pseudostratified columnar and simple columnar, and I believe that is probably more correct than our book because just look at it)

In the Seminal Vesicle

51
Q

Which organ is this image from?

What type of gland/secretion is this?

A

Prostate Gland

Apocrine Gland (although people have recategorized it to “pseudo-apocrine” because it’s really more merocrine. Fucking scientists.)

Has low cuboidal to columnar epithelium, widely dilated lumen, corpora amylacea/ prostatic stones, smooth muscle bundles within the connective tissue septa

52
Q

What tissue/region is this from?

What type of epithelium in that lumen at the top?

What are the blue arrows pointing at?

What are the red stars showing?

A

Penis - Corpus Spongiosum

Stratified Columnar Epithelium of Urethra

Blue arrows = Intimal Cushions of Ebner inside the Helicine Arteries

Red Stars = Littre’s Paraurethral Glands

53
Q

What tissue is this from?

What kind of glands do you see?

A

Glans Penis (foreskin)

Probably the only place with one external and two internal layers stratified squamous keratinizing epithelium

Has some (holocrine) sebaceous glands

Notable features: prepuce, navicular fossa, strat squam non-ker epithelium in urethra

(Having trouble finding any decent images for this; either it’s shitty histology sections or it’s mutilated dicks)