Veterinary Anatomy

Axon or Axis cylinder

Veterinary Anatomy

The single axon arises from a special part of the periphery of cell body called axon hillock. This area is devoid of Nissl bodies and Golgi apparatus. Length of axon varies from a fraction of a millimeter to several feet. Branches arise at right angles form axons and are called collaterals axon is made up […]

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Nervous tissue

Veterinary Anatomy

The nervous tissue is specialized to receive stimuli from the environment to transform them into nerve impulses and to transmit them to the nerve centers, from where appropriate response is transmitted to another organ or part of the body which reacts to the response of the original stimulus. Nucleus is pale staining and vesicular but

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Histology of Smooth muscles

Veterinary Anatomy

Smooth muscles Consists of fusiform or spindle shaped cell 15 to 500 microns in length with abundant cytoplasm in whose central thickest position the nucleus lies. The nucleus is oval elongated or rod-shaped. The nuclei of contracted muscle cells usually have a folded outline. The cytoplasm contains the usual organoids and appears more or less

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Histology of Muscle tissue

Veterinary Anatomy

Three types of muscle viz., smooth, skeletal and cardiac are distinguishable histologically- Smooth or non-striated muscle lacks the cross striations seen in other two muscles. The smooth muscle is involuntary, being especially associated with viscera which are not under the voluntary control. Skeletal muscle is striated and voluntary making up the bulky muscles of the body. Cardiac or heart muscle is striated

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Histology of Leucocytes

Veterinary Anatomy

Leucocytes (White blood cells) are nucleated, (true cells) and may be divided into non-granular  (agranulocytes) and granular (granulocytes) varieties. The cytoplasm of granular leucocytes shows numerous granules. In many, these granules are fine and slightly refractive but in others they are coarse and highly refractive. Chicken 19.8 Cat 17.2 Swine 14.9 Goat and guinea pig 12 Dog 11.3 Sheep 9.2

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Histology of Erythrocytes

Veterinary Anatomy

Erythrocyte (Red blood corpuscles) are highly differentiated and specialized for the function of transporting oxygen. In the lower vertebrates, the erythrocyte is nucleated but in mammals, it loses it nucleus, Golgi apparatus, mitochondria and centroiles before entering blood stream. The erythrocytes are acidophilic biconcave discs and round in all mammals except in camel and llama

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