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  2. Hyaline cartilage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyaline_cartilage

    Hyaline cartilage is the most common kind of cartilage in the human body. [2] It is primarily composed of type II collagen and proteoglycans. [2] Hyaline cartilage is located in the trachea, nose, epiphyseal plate, sternum, and ribs. [2] Hyaline cartilage is covered externally by a fibrous membrane known as the perichondrium. [2]

  3. File:Trachea (mammal) histology cross-section low mag.png

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Trachea_(mammal...

    English: Micrograph of a section of mammal trachea depicting the pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium, the mucous glands in the submucosa and the ring of hyaline cartilage. H&E Staining. H&E Staining.

  4. Respiratory tract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respiratory_tract

    The trachea is the largest tube in the respiratory tract and consists of tracheal rings of hyaline cartilage. It branches off into two bronchial tubes, a left and a right main bronchus. The bronchi branch off into smaller sections inside the lungs, called bronchioles. These bronchioles give rise to the air sacs in the lungs called the alveoli. [10]

  5. Trachea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trachea

    The trachea is surrounded by 16–20 rings of hyaline cartilage; these 'rings' are 4 millimetres high in the adult, incomplete and C-shaped. [2] Ligaments connect the rings. [3] The trachealis muscle connects the ends of the incomplete rings and runs along the back wall of the trachea. [3]

  6. Type II collagen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_II_collagen

    Type II collagen is the basis for hyaline cartilage, including the articular cartilages at joint surfaces. It is formed by homotrimers of collagen, type II, alpha 1 chains. It makes up 50% of all protein in cartilage and 85–90% of collagen of articular cartilage. Type II collagen is organised into fibrils.

  7. Bronchiole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronchiole

    The bronchioles are histologically distinct from the bronchi in that their walls do not have hyaline cartilage and they have club cells in their epithelial lining. The epithelium of the bronchioles starts as a simple ciliated columnar epithelium and changes to simple ciliated cuboidal epithelium as the bronchioles decreases in size.

  8. Lacuna (histology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lacuna_(histology)

    The cartilage cells or chondrocytes are contained in cavities in the matrix, called cartilage lacunae; around these, the matrix is arranged in concentric lines as if it had been formed in successive portions around the cartilage cells. This constitutes the so-called capsule of the space.

  9. Hyaline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyaline

    Hyaline cartilage is named after its glassy appearance on fresh gross pathology. [3] On light microscopy of H&E stained slides, the extracellular matrix of hyaline cartilage looks homogeneously pink, and the term "hyaline" is used to describe similarly homogeneously pink material besides the cartilage.