Muscular tissue
The stomach has an outer fibrous layer of tissue beneath which is smooth muscle arranged in diagonal, longitudinal, and circular layers. Under the smooth muscle is the submucosa, made up of loose connective tissue in which are found blood and lymph vessels and nerves of the autonomic nervous system. The innermost layer is the mucosa which contains different kinds of cells that secrete hydrochloric acid and other digestive juices, as well as the mucus that protects of the stomach from being digested by its own juices.
All four tissue types are present in the stomach.
The stomach is lined with EPITHELIAL type cells (simple columnar).
Beneath the epithelial cells there is CONNECTIVE type tissue.
Beneath this you will find (smooth) MUSCLE cells.
There is also NERVOUS type tissue present in the wall of the stomach (myenteric and submucosal plexus).
a very thick tissue. The stomach extends from the esophagus to the duodenum. It is separated from the small intestine by a muscular ring, the pyloric sphincter. The upper portion acts as a reservoir and has no or slight peristaltic contractions. The lower half has peristaltic contractions that increase in intensity toward the pyloric sphincter; it is in this region that most of the mixing actions occur.
This slide is from the lower part of the stomach. First examine the slide under the scanning objective and notice the folds, or rugae. These folds give the stomach its well-known ability to enlarge when engorged with food. On the outermost layer of these folds you may see a thin line of material. This is mucus which helps protect the tissues below from the harsh environment of the stomach. The innermost layer is a lining of simple columnar epithelium (labeled in the high magnification image). This type of epithelium provides the greatest surface area for abosrption or secretion. In the stomach the epithelial cells exposed to the lumen are primarily constructed to resist digestion by the lumen contents. The epithelial layer forms depressions called gastric glands or pits. Within these pits are mucous secreting cells, parietal cells which secrete HCL, and chief cells which secrete pepsinogen.
muscular tissue
The Mucosa tissue and the goblet cells are the type of tissue that are found in the inner lining of the stomach.
Muscular tissue
stomach
Smooth.
i have no idea at all
Simple columnar
Intestines
The stomach and blood vessels are composed of smooth muscles.
smooth muscle
because the stomach is used to get food when u eat something and that is why the stomach not a tissue
Connective tissue
function of areolar tissue in the stomach