Histology Private

Particular histology (synonym - microscopic anatomy) is a section of histology that studies the fine structure of individual tissues and organs.

Particular histology examines in detail the structural organization of various tissues (epithelial, connective, muscular, nervous), as well as the structure of specific organs and organ systems (cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, excretory, reproductive, endocrine, etc.) at the microscopic level.

Main sections of private histology:

  1. Histology of epithelial tissue
  2. Connective tissue histology
  3. Histology of muscle tissue
  4. Histology of nervous tissue
  5. Histology of the circulatory system organs
  6. Histology of the respiratory organs
  7. Histology of the digestive organs
  8. Histology of excretory organs
  9. Histology of endocrine glands
  10. Histology of the genital organs
  11. Histology of sensory organs, etc.

Studying the fine structure of organs and tissues using a microscope allows us to better understand the physiological processes in the body under normal conditions and pathology. Particular histology is closely related to cytology, embryology and other branches of biology and medicine.



Private histology, or microscopic histology. In contrast, general histology studies the external and internal structure of living organisms at any level of its organization, clinical histology is the altered structure of the organs of a sick person, industrial histology analyzes the structure of animal and plant organs in the light of industrial significance, medical gerontology