HISTOLOGY

The word ‘Histos’ is Greek for web or tissue and ‘logia’ is Greek for branch of learning, therefore ‘Histology’ means the study of the microscopic structure of tissues.

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Tissue was first used to describe the different textures of body parts being dissected by an anatomist. Histology first came into use in the 1700s, but it is thought it began in Italy in the 1600s when scientist Marcello Malpighi experimented with insects, botany, and embryology.

There are four basic tissue types including Epithelium, Connective Tissue, Nervous Tissue, and Muscle. Each type contains subtypes that may look different but share similar characteristics. Epithelium tissue is the thin tissue forming the outer layer of a body’s surface including skin and internal hollow structures

Body tissues grow by increasing the number of cells that make them up. Cells in many tissues in the body divide and grow very quickly until we become adults

Our bodies are made up of about a hundred million million (100,000,000,000,000) tiny cells. You can only see them under a microscope

Cells group themselves together to make up the tissues and organs of our bodies. They are a bit like building blocks. The diagram below shows what cells look like when they are grouped together

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Acid Red 41 (Ponceau 6R, Scarlet 6R) CI16290

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Eosin Yellowish

Eosin Yellowish

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Erythrosine B

Erythrosine B

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Field Stain A

Field Stain A

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Field Stain B

Field Stain B

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Giemsa Stain

Giemsa Stain

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Haematoxylin

Haematoxylin

Leishman Stain

Light Green Powder C.I. 42095

Malachite Green

May Grunwald Stain

Methylene Blue (Chloride)

Orange G

Ponceau S

Sudan II

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Sudan IV

Sudan IV

Stains Reagents And Dyes

Tartarzine C.I. 19140

Tartarzine C.I. 19140