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Skeletal System 1

Skeleton ? system
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views38 pages

Skeletal System 1

Skeleton ? system
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Functions of bone (skeleton)

Support and protection

Blood cell formation

Mineral storage (calcium especially)

Site for muscle attachmentbody movement

Triglyceride storage (Yellow bone marrow)


Bones classified by shape: long, short, flat,
irregular, sesamoid (Bone embedded within a
tendon)

Bone enclosed in periosteum (fibrous sheath


covering bones), which is continuous with tendons
and ligaments, blood vessels in periosteum

Epiphysis- ends
spongy bone contains red marrow
compact bone, articular cartilage
Diaphysis- middle
compact bone
medullary cavity- contains yellow marrow
(fat)
lined with endosteum (squamous epithelium)
Compact bone
osteocytes within lacunae
arranged in concentric circles called lamellae

This surround a central canal; complex is called


Haversian system

Canaliculi connect osteocytes to central canal and


to each other
Intramembranous Ossification
• Development of ossification center
• Calcification
• Formation of trabeculae
• Development of periosteum
Endochondral Ossification

Prenatal development
skeleton is mostly cartilaginous

Cartilage cells and then osteoblasts start to


deposit minerals

Cartilaginous disk (epiphyseal disk) remains


in epiphysis

Cells eventually stop dividing


Adults continually break down and build up bone

Osteoclasts remove damaged cells and release


calcium into blood

Osteoblasts remove calcium from blood and build


new matrix. They become trapped
osteoclasts
Types of bone breaks

Simple- skin is not pierced


Compound- skin is pierced
Complete- bone is broken in half
Partial- broken lengthwise but not into two
parts
Greenstick- incomplete break on outer arc
Comminuted- broken into several pieces
Spiral- twisted
Fracture repair

Hematoma- blood clot in space between edges


of break

Fibrocartilage callus- begins tissue repair

Bony callus- osteoblasts produce trabeculae


(structural support) of spongy bone and
replace fibrocartilage

Remodeling- osteoblasts build new compact bone,


osteoclasts build new medullary cavity
Axial skeleton
skull (cranium and facial bones)
hyoid bone (anchors tongue and muscles
associated with swallowing)
vertebral column (vertebrae and disks)
thoracic cage (ribs and sternum)

Appendicular skeleton
pectoral girdle (clavicles and scapulae)
upper limbs (arms)
pelvic girdle (coxal bones, sacrum, coccyx)
lower limbs (legs)
posterior view
p. 135
Axial skeleton supports and protects organs
of head, neck and trunk

Appendicular skeleton- bones of limbs and


bones that anchor them to the axial
skeleton

Articulation- where joints are formed


22 bones in skull
6 in middle ears
1 hyoid bone
26 in vertebral column
25 in thoracic cage

4 in pectoral girdle
60 in upper limbs
60 in lower limbs
2 in pelvic girdle

206 bones in all


The skull

8 sutured bones in cranium


Facial bones: 13 sutured bones, 1 mandible

Cranium
encases brain
attachments for muscles
sinuses
• 8 Cranial Bones:
1 x Ethmoid Bone
1 x Frontal Bone
1 x Occipital Bone
2 x Parietal Bones
1 x Sphenoid Bone
2 x Temporal Bones
• 14 Facial Bones:
2 x Inferior Nasal Conchae
2 x Lacrimal Bones
1 x Mandible
2 x Maxillae (pl.); Maxilla (sing.)
2 x Nasal Bones
2 x Palatine Bones
1 x Vomer
2 x Zygomatic Bones
Allows for
growth
Vertebral column

7 cervial vertebrae
12 thoracic
5 lumbar
1 sacrum (5 fused
1 coccyx (4 fused)

Vertebrae vary in size and morphology


Thoracic cage
ribs
thoracic vertebrae
sternum
costal cartilages

True ribs are directly attached to the sternum


(first seven pairs)
Three false ribs are joined to the 7th rib
Two pairs of floating ribs
Clavicles and scapulae

Help brace shoulders


Attachment sites for muscles
Bones of upper limb

Humerus (upper arm)


Radius; ulna
Carpals, metacarpals, phalanges

Bones of lower limb

Femur
Patella
Tibia, fibula
Tarsals, metatarslas, phalanges
Joints

Immovable (synarthoses) bones sutured together


by connective tissue: skull

Slightly movable (amphiarthoses) connected by


fibrocartilage or hyaline cartilage:
vertebrae, rib/sternum joint, pubic
symphysis

Freely movable (diarthroses)- separated


ligaments- hold bones together
tendons- muscle to bone
lined by synovial membrane
Types of freely movable joints

Saddle: carpal and metacarpal bones of thumb

Ball and socket: shoulder and hip joints

Pivot- rotation only: proximal end of radius and ulna

Hinge- up and down movement in one plane:


knee and elbow

Gliding- sliding and twisting: wrist and ankle

Condyloid- movement in different planes but not


rotations: btw metacarpals and phalanges
Types of movement and examples (with muscles)
flexion- move lower leg toward upper
extension- straightening the leg

abduction- moving leg away from body


adduction- movong leg toward the body

rotation- around its axis


supination- rotation of arm to palm-up position
pronation- palm down

circumduction- swinging arms in circles

inversion- turning foot so sole is inward


eversion- sole is out
Elevation and depression- raising body part up
or down

Aging and bones


both bone and cartilage tend to deteriorate
cartilage: chondrocytes die, cartilage
becomes calcified

osteoporosis; bone is broken down faster


than it can be built
bones get weak and brittle; tend to fracture
easily

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