What are the features of unstriated muscle?
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♡smooth muscle
Muscle tissue that contracts without conscious control, having the form of thin layers or sheets made up of spindle-shaped, unstriated cells with single nuclei and found in the walls of the internal organs, such as the stomach, intestine, bladder, and blood vessels, excluding the heart.
smooth muscle - a muscle that contracts without conscious control and found in walls of internal organs such as stomach and intestine and bladder and blood vessels (excluding the heart)
involuntary muscle
☆muscle, musculus - one of the contractile organs of the body
☆myometrium - the smooth muscle forming the wall of the uterus
☆musculus sphincter ani internus - an internal ring of smooth muscle formed by circular fibers of the rectum.
2.smooth muscle - muscle tissue that does not appear striated under the microscope; has the form of thin layers or sheets
1.muscular tissue, muscle - animal tissue consisting predominantly of contractile cells
☆smooth muscle cell - cells of the smooth muscles
♡smooth muscle
Muscle tissue that contracts without conscious control, having the form of thin layers or sheets made up of spindle-shaped, unstriated cells with single nuclei and found in the walls of the internal organs, such as the stomach, intestine, bladder, and blood vessels, excluding the heart.
smooth muscle - a muscle that contracts without conscious control and found in walls of internal organs such as stomach and intestine and bladder and blood vessels (excluding the heart)
involuntary muscle
☆muscle, musculus - one of the contractile organs of the body
☆myometrium - the smooth muscle forming the wall of the uterus
☆musculus sphincter ani internus - an internal ring of smooth muscle formed by circular fibers of the rectum.
2.smooth muscle - muscle tissue that does not appear striated under the microscope; has the form of thin layers or sheets
1.muscular tissue, muscle - animal tissue consisting predominantly of contractile cells
☆smooth muscle cell - cells of the smooth muscles
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⏭️⏭️smooth muscle. Muscle tissue that contracts without conscious control, having the form of thin layers or sheets made up of spindle-shaped, unstriated cells with single nuclei and found in the walls of the internal organs, such as the stomach, intestine, bladder, and blood vessels, excluding the heart.
⏭️⏭️A type of tissue composed of contractile cells. Each muscle cell is filled with parallel actin and myosin filaments. When activated by an internal release of calcium, the filaments use the energy in ATP to crawl along each other in opposite directions. This movement shortens the length of the cell, which then contracts.
⏭️⏭️The three general classes of muscle cells (myocytes) are skeletal (striated), cardiac (striated), and smooth; most of the muscle in humans is skeletal. A typical muscle has a central portion called the belly and two or more attachment ends with tendons; the more stationary of the attachments is called the muscle's origin, while the more movable attachment is called the muscle's insertion. See: illustration
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I Hope It help you
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✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️✍️
⏭️⏭️smooth muscle. Muscle tissue that contracts without conscious control, having the form of thin layers or sheets made up of spindle-shaped, unstriated cells with single nuclei and found in the walls of the internal organs, such as the stomach, intestine, bladder, and blood vessels, excluding the heart.
⏭️⏭️A type of tissue composed of contractile cells. Each muscle cell is filled with parallel actin and myosin filaments. When activated by an internal release of calcium, the filaments use the energy in ATP to crawl along each other in opposite directions. This movement shortens the length of the cell, which then contracts.
⏭️⏭️The three general classes of muscle cells (myocytes) are skeletal (striated), cardiac (striated), and smooth; most of the muscle in humans is skeletal. A typical muscle has a central portion called the belly and two or more attachment ends with tendons; the more stationary of the attachments is called the muscle's origin, while the more movable attachment is called the muscle's insertion. See: illustration
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I Hope It help you
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