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Look at slide 44 This is a
frontal section through one-half of the larynx. Follow the epithelial lining and
note that it changes from Respiratory epithelium (pseudostratified columnar) to stratified
squamous non-keratinixed epithelium.
The stratified squamous epithelium signals that you are in the True
Vocal Cord. The photograph to the left illustrates the epithelium. Move
deeper under this epithelium. You will first encounter dense connective tissue.
This is the Vocal Ligament. Continue to follow this tissue to a
mass of muscle cut in cross section. This is the Vocalis muscle. It
is illustrated in the photograph, below.
1. What type of muscle is found in the vocalis muscle?
Look at the peripheral nuclei. That is your best clue to skeletal muscle.
Continue to study slide 44 and find the following structures. First,
the region which shows a sinus-like invagionation lined with Respiratory epithelium is
called the Laryngeal ventricle. Just above this ventricle is the
so-called "false vocal cord" which contains many mixed glands
(serous and mucous glands).
Look at slide 45 which is a cross section through the trachea.
The luman is lined with ciliated Pseudostratified columnar epithelium with Goblet
cells. The Epithelium is supported by a basement membrane which rests on a
slightly condensed layer of connective tissue. The photograph to the left is a semithin
section of trachea embedded in plastic.
This section comes from your slide 45. The epithelium
continues the pseudostratified characteristics seen in the Olfactory epithelium. It
is also ciliated and contains goblet cells.
The connective tissue under the epithelium is called the
"adventitia". In this connective tissue are numerous seromucous (mixed)
glands, as well as blood vessels and nerves. These are called
"tracheal glands". Identify the serous and mucous cells in the glands on your
section and also on this photograph (to the left). Serous glands contain
proteinaceous granules and are therefore stained light purple. The mucin in the
mucous glands is washed out. The mucous glands are therefore the lightest staining.
What is the function of these glands?
Note the C-shaped tracheal ring. If
you have studied bone and cartilage, you may have already identified perichondrium
and the chondrocytes in this hyaline cartilage. The cartilage is replaced by smooth
muscle and elastic fibers in the posterior wall of the trachea in your slide.
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Last updated: 06/04/01
© copyright 1998 Gwen V. Childs, Ph.D.
URL Address: http://cellbio.utmb.edu/microanatomy/
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