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CHAPTER 9 - CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
Histology Guide
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MICROSCOPE SLIDE

SLIDE NAME
MHS 244 Elastic Artery
TISSUE
Elastic Artery
STAIN
Aldehyde Fuchsin
IMAGE SIZE
20,900 x 25,450 pixels
2 GB
FILE SIZE
69 MB
OBJECTIVE
40x
PIXEL SIZE
0.3171 µm
SOURCE
T. Clark Brelje and Robert L. Sorenson
Department of Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development
School of Medicine
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, MN

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Department of Genetics, Cell Biology and Development
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MHS 244 Elastic Artery

Elastic Artery
(Aldehyde fuchsin)

Elastic arteries are large vessels that convey blood from the heart to systemic and pulmonary circulations.

During the contraction phase of the cardiac cycle (systole), the higher pressure causes their walls to distend. During the relaxation phase of the cardiac cycle (diastole), the lower pressure causes their walls to deflate. This helps the movement of blood through the arteries.

This pumping action is possible because of the elastic tissue in the arterial wall. Elastin stains dark purple with aldehyde fuchsin.

  • - inner layer composed of the endothelium and subendothelial connective tissue. This is the thinnest of the three layers in elastic arteries. The nuclei of endothelial cells bulge into the lumen. The internal elastic membrane is the innermost layer of elastic tissue (dark purple) in the arterial wall.
  • - middle layer composed of of circumferentially arranged smooth muscle (unstained) and sheets of elastic tissue (dark purple). This is the thickest of the three layers in elastic arteries. The number of elastic lamellae is linked to blood pressure in the artery.
  • - outer layer of dense irregular connective tissue. This layer is usually less than half the thickness of the tunica media in elastic arteries.

The smooth muscle cells (not fibroblasts) are responsible for the synthesis and maintenance of collagen and elastic fibers of the tunica media.

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