Study of the structure and organization of living organisms.
Anatomy isn't just about big organs—we also study what things look like under a microscope!
Each tissue is made of specialized cells. For example, neurons are nerve cells, and osteocytes are bone cells.
Understanding tissues and cells helps us figure out how diseases start, how organs repair themselves, and how the body grows.
The human brain has about 86 billion neurons!
Looking at skin cells under a microscope shows layers of epithelial tissue.
Muscle tissue appears as long, stretchy fibers in microscope slides.
Microscopic anatomy studies tissues and cells to understand how organs function.