Page:Structure and functions of the body; a hand-book of anatomy and physiology for nurses and others desiring a practical knowledge of the subject (IA structurefunctio00fiskrich).pdf/21

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being filled with the material the gland secretes. Finally, ciliated epithelium is composed of columnar cells with cilia or little hair-like processes upon their free surface which serve to send secreted fluids and other matters along the surfaces where they occur, as in the air passages, parts of the generative organs, the ventricles of the brain, and the central canal of the spinal cord.

Connective tissue has a great deal of intercellular substance. One form, areolar tissue, is composed of a loose network of fine white fibers with a few yellow elastic fibers interspersed and with cells lying in the spaces between the fibers. It connects and surrounds the different organs and parts, holding them together, yet allowing free motion, and is one of the most extensively distributed of the tissues. It is continuous throughout.

Fig. 2.—Section of bladder epithelium. (Hill.)

Closely allied to the areolar is the fibrous tissue, in which the white fibers lie close together and run for the most part in one direction only. This is found in ligaments, joints and tendons, as also in such fibrous protective membranes as the periosteum, dura mater, the fasciæ of muscles, etc. Fibrous tissue is silvery white in appearance and is very strong and tough, yet pliant. It is not extensile.

Elastic tissue, on the other hand, has a large predominance of yellow elastic fibers and is very extensile and elastic, though not so strong as the fibrous. It is found in the walls of the blood-vessels, especially the arteries,