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Chapter 6/9 - copy

Where are the triglycerides stored in the bone?

adipose cells of the yellow marrow

What is the diaphisis?

shaft or body of a long bone that is long, cylindrical, and main portion of the bone

What is the epiphyses?

the proximal and distal ends of the long bone

What are the functions of the skeleton system?

support, protect internal organs, assist in movement, mineral homeostasis, blood cell reproduction, stores triglycerides

What does the axis skeleton contain?

80 bones (cranium-8, face-14, hyoid bone-1, auditory ossicles-6, vertebral column-26, thorax(sternum-1, ribs-24)

What does the appendicular skeleton contain?

126 bones, pectoral(clavicle-2, scapula-2), upper limbs( humerus-2, ulna-2, radius-2, carpals16, metacarpals-10, phalanges-28), pelvic(coxal bone-2), lower limbs(femur-2, patella-2, fibula-2, tibia-2, tarsals-14, metatarsals-10, phalanges-28)

Long bone shape

greater in length than width

Short bone shape

cube-shaped

Flat bone shape

thin layers of parallel plates

Irregular bone shape

complex shape

Seasamoid bones shape

shaped like a sesame seed

What is a metaphyses?

region between the diaphysis and epiphyses, contains growth plate during growing ages then it becomes the epiphyses line

What is articular cartilage?

thin hyaline cartilage that covers the part of the epiphysis that forms an articulation with another bone

What reduces friction and shock to freely movable joints?

articular cartilage

What is the medulla cavity?

hollo, cylindrical space in the diaphysis that contains fatty yellow bone marrow and numerous blood vessels in the adult

What is the endosteum?

thin membrane that lines the medulla cavity containing a single layer osteoblasts, osteoclasts, and connective tissue

What is the periosteum?

tough, connective tissue sheath and blood supply that surrounds the bone surface where it is NOT covered by cartilage

What helps the bone w/ repairs, protection, nourishment, and muscle/ligament attachments?

periosteum

What is the periosteum made of?

outer fibrous layer of dense irregular connective tisse, inner layer of osteogenic of cells

What attaches to bone by peforating fibers (Sharpey's fiber) consisting of collagen fiber?

periosteum

Where are blood cells formed?

in between the trabeculae of the spongy bone in the adipose tissue

What determines a bone's hardness?

crystallized mineral salts

What determines a bone's flexibility?

collagen fibers

What conists of a layer of hyaline cartilage and allows the bone grow in length?

epiphyseal plate

What happens when the bone is done growing?

the epiphyseal plate is replaced with bone and then the epipyseal line is made

What is the most abundant chemical in the bone?

calcium phosphate

What is calcification?

when the mineral salts and collagen fibers harden in the bone that is initated by osteoblasts

What chemicals make up the bone?

extracellar matrix, calcium phosphate, calcium hydroxide, magnesium, fluoride, potassium, sulfate

What supplies the bone with blood and nerves?

Periosteal arteries and nerves enter diaphysis thru Volluman's canal and are accompanied by periosteal vein

How does the metaphysis and epipysis receive blood?

have own blood supply that enters along circular band between the growth plate and joint plate

How does the periosteal arteries and periosteal vein supply the bone?

they supply the superficial layer of cortex and connect w/ nutrient artery-if obstruction of artery, the vein can meet needs to both systems

What cells are in the bone?

osteoprogenitor cells, osteoblasts, ostesclasts, osteocytes

What is the only bone cell that can undergo cell division?

osteoprogenator cell

What develops when osteoprogenitor cells go through cell division?

osteoblasts

Where do bone cells derive from?

mesenchyme

Where do you find osteoprogenitor cells?

inner portion of periosteum, the endosteum, and bone canals that have blood vessels

What iniates calcification and is "bone-building" cells?

osteoblasts

What does osteoblast have to do with extracellar matrix?

to build the matrix, they synthesize collagen fibers and other organic components

How are osteoclasts formed?

when osteoblasts become surrounded by extracellar matrix and trapped in their own secretions

Where are osteoclasts located?

endosteum

What does osteoclasts do?

has lysomal enzyme and acids that digest protein and mineral components of the matrix

What is bone resorption?

breakdown of extracellar matrix that releases calcium from bone

Where are osteoclasts derived from?

the large cell comes from a fusion of monocytes

What are osteocytes?

mature bone cells, maintains bones daily homeostasis, main cell in bone tissue

Where are osteons found?

compact bone

How do osteons align?

parallel lines to length of diaphysis

How are osteons formed?

from concentric lamellae that surround a network of nerves and blood vessels called central canal

What are some of the features the compact bone have?

few spaces, strongest bone tissue, provides protection and support, resists stress cause by wt and movement. beneath peristeum, makes up most of diaphysis

Concentric Lamellae (compact bone)

rings of calcified matrix that surround a network of nerves and blood vessels called central (osteonic) canals and forms osteons

Central (osteonic) canal

network of nerves and blood vessels

Lacunae (compact bone)

small spaces between the concentric lamellae and contains osteocytes

Canaliculi (compact bone)

tiny channels that are filed with extracellar fluid that radiates out from the lacuna and provides routes for nutrients and oxygen and removes wastes

Interstitial Lamellae (compact bone)

areas between osteons and contains fragments of older osteons

Perorating Canals (compact bone)

where blood vessels and nerves penetrate the bone

Inner circumferential lamellae (compact bone)

lines the medullary cavity

Outer circumferential lamellae (compact bone)

lies deep to the periosteum and are connected to periosteum by perforating (Sharpey's) fibers

Called the "cancellous or trabecular" bone

spongy

Where is the spongy bone located?

interior of short, flat, seasmoid, and irregular bones, covered by compact bone

What does the spongy bone form?

core of the epiphysea of long bone

What has lamellae arranged in irregular pattern of thin columns (trabecular)?

spongy bone

What does the spongy not have?

osteons, epiphyses, diaphysis

What is between the spaces of trabeculae?

red bone marrow that produce RBC or yellow marrow in adipose tissue

What happens when a bone is placed under stress?

increase deposition of mineral salts and increase in collage fibers, production occurs and bone will remodel itself to become stronger

How can bone tissue strengthen?

mechanical stress

What are the main mechanical stress put on bones?

pull of skeletal bones and pull of gravity

Why is Vit A important in bone growth/remodeling?

stimulates activity of osteoblasts

Why is Vit C important in bone growth/remodeling?

collagen synthesis and its the main bone protein

Why is Vit D important in bone growth/remodeling?

increase absorption of calcium

Why is Vit K important in bone growth/remodeling?

production of proteins; essential for blood clotting factors

Why is Vit B12 important in bone growth/remodeling?

osteoblast function; RBC production

What is ossification (osteogenesis) of bone?

process of bone formation

When does ossification happen?

embryological and fetal developement, bone growth before adulthood, bone remodel, healing of fracture

Intramembrane (ossification)

occurs in flat bones when a connective tissue membrane is replaced by bone

Endochondral (ossification)

replaces cartilage with bone in developing embryo and fetus

Interstitial growth (endochondral ossification)

continual chondrocytes cell division and secretion of the cartilage extracellar matrix resulting in increase in length

Appositional growth (endochondrial ossification)

occurs when chondroblasts in perichondrium deposit extracellar matrix on surface of cartilage model resulting in growth of cartilage in width

Demineralization (aging bone)

loss of calcium and other minerals from matrix

Brittleness (aging bone)

caused by decrease in rate of protein synthesis

What regulates calcium exchange?

Parathyroid hormone (PTH)

What is secreted when calcium level drops and osteoclasts are stimulated to increase bone resorption and calcium is increased?

Parathyroid hormone (PTH)

What stimulates calcitrol by the kidneys to increase calcium absorption in intestines?

Parathyroid hormone (PTH)

What decreased excretion of calcium through urination by stimulating tubular resportion of calcium?

Parathyroid hormone (PTH)

This is controlled by negative feed back..

Parathyroid hormone (PTH)

Calcitonin

causes negative feedback by inhibiting PTH, by inhibiting the action of osteoclasts which decrease blood calcium and blood phosphate levels

Zone of resting cartilage (epiphyseal plate)

anchors epiphyseal plate to emphysis bone, does NOT participate in cell growth, lies next to epiphysis and consists of scattered chondrocytes

Zone of proliferating cartilage (epiphyseal plate)

larger chondrocytes stacked like coins that divide and secrete matrix-these chondrocytes replace those that died at diaphyseal side of epiphyseal plate

Zone of hypertrophic resting cartilage (epiphyseal plate)

consists of large, maturing chondrocytes arranged in columns

What is the final "zone" for epiphyseal plate?

calcified cartilage

What do osteoblasts and osteoclasts do in the zone of calcified cartilage?

osteoclasts dissolve calcified cartilage, osteoblasts lay down bone matrix replacing th calcified cartilage

What happens to cartilage in zone of calcified cartilage?

calcified cartilage becomes the "new diaphysis" attached to the rest of to diaphysis of the bone

What is a few cells thick?

Zone of Calcified Cartilage

Reactive phase (bone repair)

cells die resulting in swellling and inflammation, phagocytes (neutrophils and macrophanges) and osteaocytes begin to removed dead and damage tissue

The "early infammatory phase"

reactive phase

Reparative Phase (bone repair)

fibroblast produce collage fibers at fractue site, cells form chrondoblasts and form fibrocartilage and collage fibers form to bridge broken bone ends, osteogenitator develop to osteoblasts which begin to produce spongy bone trabeculae that join living and dead sections of bone, fibrocartilage is converted to spongy bone and callus which is called bony callus

Bone remodeling phase (bone repair)

last step-bony callus is remodeled, dead sections are resorbed osteoblasts, compact bone replaces spongy bone

osteoarthiritis

degeneration of articular cartilage so bones end touch causing friction of bones which worsens the condition, common in the elderly

osteoporosis

bone resorption outpaces bone deposit, cause due to calcium lost in urine, feces and sweat is more than calcium absorbed in diet. tx calcium and vitamin D, wt bearing exercise, hormone therapy, bone building meds

osteomalacia

adult form of rickets, new bone formed in remodeling does NOT calcify, bone fractures commone. tx vitamin D and sun exposure

Rickets

inadequate calcification of bone matrix due to deficiency in Vit D, occurs in children, soft rubbery bones, causes bowed legs and deformities in pelvis. tx vit D and sun exposure

osteomyelitis

infection of bone caused by Staph aureos, usually from surgeries, open fractures, penetrating wounds, UTIs, upper resp infection, adjacent tissue infection(diabetics) tx antibiotics, surgery

IGFs(insulin-like growth factors)-(hormones in bone growth)

produce liver and bone tissue

Growth hormone (hormones in bone growth)

promotes genera body growth including bones

Thyroid hormones (T3, T4) (hormones in bone growth)

stimulate osteoblasts

Insulin (hormones in bone growth)

increase synthesis of bone proteins

Sex hormones (hormones in bone growth)

promotes growth spurts, makes femine/masculine characteristics in bones, induces epiphyseal plate closure, ends longitude bone growth

Synarthrosis (joint funct.)

allows no movement

Amphiarthrosis (joint funct.)

allows little movement

Diarthrosis (joint funct.)

freely movable

Articulating bones are held together with dense fibrous C.T..

fibrous joints

Sutures and Syndesmoses are...

types of fibrous joints

Where are Sutures found?

between skull bones

Articulating bones united by thin layer of dense irregular C.T...

Sutures

What are Sutures replaced with due to aging?

synostoses (separate cranial bones fused as one)

Suture functional class...

synarthrosis(immovable) and amphiathrosis (slightly movable)

Has a denser fibrous CT than sutures

Syndesmoses

Functional class of Syndesmoses

amphiarthrosis (slightly movable)

Interosseous ligament (type of Syndesmoses)

ligament between two bones ex: anterior tibiofibular ligament

Interosseous membrane (type of Syndesmoses)

sheet of dense irregular connective tissue between long bones and allows slight movement ex: between tibia and fibula

Gomphosis (type of Syndesmoses)

peg-in-socket; dense irregular connective tissue between tooth adn alveolus called periodontal ligament ex: between tooth adn alveolar socket of mandinble and maxilla

Lacks a synovial cavity

firbous and cartilage joints

Cartilaginous Joint

articulating bones held together with hyaline or fibrous cartilage connective tissue

Cartilaginous Joint

permits little to no movement

What kind of joints are Synchondroses and Symphyses?

Cartilaginous

Synchondrosis (cartil. joint)

connecting material is hyaline cartilage ex: between first rib and manubrium

Functional class of Synchondrosis

synarthrosis (immovable) and amphiarthrosis (slightly movable)

Epiphyseal Cartilage (type of sychondrosis)

hyaline cartilage growth plate-not associated with movements ex: epihyseal plate

Symphysis (cartil. joint)

articulations covered with hyaline cartilage but connecting material is broad, flat disc of fibrocartilage-occurs midline of body ex: pubis symphysis and intervertebral joints

Functional class of symphysis

amphiarthrosis(slightly movable)

Permits large range of movent

synovial cavity

Has blood and nerve supply

synovial cavity

Contains synovial fluid

synovial cavity

Articulating bones are covered w/ articular cartilage and held together by ligaments

synovial cavity

Surrounded by an articular capsule

synovial cavity

Articular Cartilage (synovial joints)

covers surfaces of bones, creates smooth slippery surfaces which reduces friction and helps absorb shock

Articular (joint) Capsule-(synovial joint)

encloses the synovial cavity and joint articulating bones-containes an outer fibrous layer and an inner synovial membrane

Outer fibrous layer (articular capsule)

thickened continuation of the periosteum of articulating bones composed of irregular C.T.

Inner synovial membrane (articular capsule)

secretes synovial fluid and composed fo areolar C.T. compose of collagen and elastic fibers

A function of synovial fluid..

provide oxygen and nutrients

A function of synovial fluid..

remove carbon dioxide, wastes and removes microbes and devris via phagocytes

A function of synovial fluid..

reduces friction by lubricating joints and absorbs shock

Synovial fluid

secreted by cells of synovial membrane of the articular capsule

Synovial fluid

vicous, clear fluid containg hyaluronic acid and interstitial fluid from blood plasma

Bursae

sac-like structures fillned with synovial fluid that cushion movement of one body part over another

Tendon sheaths

tube-like bursae that wraps around tendons subjected to a great deal of friction ex: tendons that pass through tunnels and over bony prominences

Ankylosis (result of RA)

the end result of inflammed synovial joint thickens into pannus (abnormal layer of fibrovascular or granulation tissue) that errodes cartilage, scar tissue forms, and articulating bone ends connect which produces bent, deformed fingers and toes

Rheumatism

painful, disorder of supporting structures of the body such as bones, muscles, tendons and ligaments-not caused by infection/injury

Arthritis

a form of rheumatism in which the joints are swollen, stiff and painful

Extracapulsar Ligament (accessory to SJ)

outside the articular capsule

Intracapsular ligament (accessory to SJ)

inside the articular capsule but excluded from cavity by folds of synovial membrane

Articular disc (Menisci) (Accessory to SJ)

crescent-shaped pads of fibrocartilage between surfaces of the articulating bones and attached to fibrous capsule-seen in knees

Function of Articular discs

shock absorption, creates better fit for bones, adaptable surfaces for movements, allow greater distribution of wt and synovial fluid

Labra (labrum, sing) (accessory of SJ)

ring-like fibrous cartilage lip extending from circumference of the joint socket, helps deepen joint socket, increase contract between socket and head of bone, important in ball socket joints of shoulder and hips

Gliding

movement of flat bone surface, back n forth, side to side over one another

Angular

increase or decrease in angle between bones

Flexion (angular)

decrease n angle between articulating bones ex: bending arm up to touch same sided shoulder

Lateral flexion (angular)

moving of trunk in frontal plane ex: swaying side to side

Extension (angular)

increase in angle between articulating bones ex: taking hand off from same side shoulder and putting arm down to the side

hyperextension (angular)

extension beyond anatomical position ex: moving leg backwards while standing in place

Abduction (angular)

movement of bone away from midline ex:lifting arm straight out to the side

Adduction (angular)

movement of bone towards midline ex: lowering arm stretched out to the side down to the side of body

Circumduction (angular)

flexion, abduction, extension, adduction and rotate in succession ex: moving one leg in a circle while standing in place

Rotation

movement of bone around longitudinal axis ex: shaking your head "no"

Elevation

superior movement of body part ex lifting up

Depression

inferior movement of body part ex: lowering

Protraction

anterior movement of body part in transverse plane

Retraction

posterior movement of body part in tranverse plane

Inversion

medial movement of sole

Eversion

lateral movement of sole

Dorisflexion

bending foot in direction of dorsum ex: bending the ankle so the toes are pointing up

Plantar flexion

bending foot in direction of sole ex: sole of ground

Supination

movement of forearm that turns palm anteriorly ex: arm straight out with palm up

Pronation

movement of forearm that turns posteriorly ex: arm straight out to front with palm down

Opposition

movement of thumbs across palm to touch fingertips on same hand

How does structure and shape of articulating bones affect the S.J. motion?

determines how closely the bones can fit which determines their type of movement

How does arrangement and tension of muscle affect S.J. motion?

muscle tension reinforces the restraint on a joint by its ligaments and thus restricts movement

How does the contact of soft spots affect S.J. motion?

point where one body surface contacts another may limit movement and also may be restricted by the presence of adipose tissue

How does hormones affect S.J. movement?

relaxin increases flexibility of pubis symphysis cartilage and loosend various ligaments at end of pregnancy which allows expansion of pelvic

How does disuse affect ROM?

decrease in movement if not used in a period of time; maybe caused by muscle atrophy around the joint or decrease of synovial joint fluid

Plane joints

articulated surfaces flat or slightly curved ex: intercarpal, intertarsal, vertebracostal, sternocostal

Hinge Joint

convex surface fits in a concave surface ex: knee, elbow ankle, interphalangeal joints

Pivot joint

rounded or pointed surface fits into ring formed partly by bone and partly ligament ex: alanto-axis radioulnar joints

Condyloid joint

oval shaped projection fits into oval shaped depression ex: radiocarpal and metacorpophalangeal joint

Saddle joint

articular surface of one bone is saddled shape and the other articular surface of the bone "sits" in the saddel ex: thumb

Ball in Socket joint

ball like surface fits into cup like depression ex: shoulder and him joints

Sprain

forceable twistinf of a joint that tears a ligament but doesn't dislocate bones tx PRICE (protection, rest, ice, compression, elevation)

Strain

stretched or partially torn muscle or muscle and tendon, often occurs when muscle contracts suddenly and powerfully

Tensoynovitis

inflammationof tendons, tendons sheaths, and synovial membrane, tenderness and pain, usually follows trauma, sprain, or excessive exercise

Osteaoarthritis (OA)

most common arthritis

Osteoarthritis (OA)

slow and irreversible

Osteoarthritis (OA)

related to normal aging and AKA "wear and tear" arthritis

Osteoarthritis (OA)

increase in production of metalloproteinase enzyme that breaks down cartilage, exposed bone ends thickened, enlarged, form bones spurs and restrict movement

Osteoarthritis (OA)

affects women more than med

Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)

chronic, inflammatory, autoimmune disease

Rheumatoid (RA)

exacerbations and remission

Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)

begins with synovitis of afftected joint, inflammatory chemicals are inappropriately released, inflammatory blood cells migrate to joint and increase swelling

Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) treatment

aspirin, ABT, PT, anti-inflammatory drugs, immunosuppressants, Enbrel

Gouty Arthritis

deposits of uric acid crystals in joint and soft tissues, inflammation response

Gouty Arthritis

cause is excess of intake of purine containing foods or inablilty to remove extra uric acid tx: colchine, nonsteriodal anti-inflammatory drugs, decrease in seafood and alcohol intake, glucorticoids

Gouty Arthritis

untreated leads to bone ends fuse and immbolizes joint

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