Chapter 6 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the physical functions of the skeletal system?

A

Support and protection

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2
Q

What are the metabolic function in the skeletal system?

A

Blood formation in marrow
acid base balance
detoxification
electrolyte balance

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3
Q

What do these metabolic functions do in the skeletal system Blood formation in marrow, acid base balance, detoxification, electrolyte balance?

A
  • Blood formation in marrow (bones house bone marrow tissue which produces most of the blood cells)
    • Acid-base balance (bone buffers the blood against excessive pH changes)
    • Detoxification (bone absorbs heavy metals and other foreign elements from the blood
  • Electrolyte balance (it stores calcium and phosphate and releases them in the body)
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4
Q

What is mineralization?

A

Process of hardening

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5
Q

What is calcification?

A

Deposition of calcium salts

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6
Q

What does the skeletal system consist of?

A

Bones
Ligaments
Cartilage

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7
Q

Protein fibers = ??
&
Ground substance = ??

A

Protein fibers = organic matter
&
Ground substance = inorganic matter

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8
Q

Where are long bones located?

A

Bones in the superior and inferior limbs

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9
Q

What bones are short bones located?

A

Metacarpal and metatarsal bones

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10
Q

What bones are flat bones?

A

Scapula, clavicle, cranial, and sternum, and ribs

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11
Q

What bones are irregular shaped bones?

A

Vertebrae and sacrum

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12
Q

Define epiphysis

A

End of a long bone

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13
Q

Define diaphysis

A

Body or shaft of a long bone

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14
Q

Define perforating fibers

A

Fibers that anchor periosteum to the bone

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15
Q

What is at the end of each bone?

A

hyaline cartilage

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16
Q

Define metaphysis

A

Is the part of the diaphysis that is part of the growing long bone

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17
Q

Define nutrient foramen

A
  • The external opening of each nutrient canal
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18
Q

Define nutrient canal or perforating canal

A

Vascular channels that penetrate the compact bone tissue surrounding the medullary cavity

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19
Q

What is an epiphysis plate?

A

Is the growth plate

20
Q

What is the epiphyseal line?

A

Where the bone has stopped growing

21
Q

What are osteogenic cells?

A

Stem cells found in the endosteum that give rise to osteoblasts

22
Q

What are concentric lamellae?

A

Layers of matrix arranged around the central canal

23
Q

What is the central canal?

A

Neurovascular channel surrounded by a concentric lamellae

24
Q

What are osteons?

A

The basic structural unit or functional subunit of compact bone

25
Q

What are perforating canals?

A

perpendicular passages which join central canals

26
Q

What are circumferential lamellae?

A
  • Lamellae that surround and line the outer surface of a long bone
27
Q

What are interstitial lamellae?

A

Remains of old osteons that broke down as the bone grew

28
Q

Where are lacunae located? What are they connected by?

A

Are between adjacent layers of matrix and are connected with each other by canaliculi

29
Q

What are osteoblasts that are in lacunae called?

A

osteocytes

30
Q

Define compact bones

A
  • Forms the outer shell of the bone and forms the majority of the bone
31
Q

Define spongy bone

A

They contain spicules and trabeculae and are porous appearance

32
Q

What is the spongy layer of the cranium called?

A

The diploe

33
Q

What are the 2 types of bone marrow? and define them

A
  • Red marrow (blood-forming tissue)
  • Yellow marrow (mainly fat tissue, no longer produces blood)
34
Q

What is ossification?

A

Bone formation

35
Q

What is endochondral in bone development?

A

Where Hyaline Cartilage turns to bone

36
Q

What is Intramembranous ossification?

A

Converts a soft mesenchymal sheet into a mature flat bone

37
Q

What is bone elongation?

A

The epiphyseal plates grow/lengthen and when they close a person stops growing

38
Q

What is appositional growth?

A

It increases the bones diameter and thickness

39
Q

What is bone remodeling?

A

Absorption of old bone and deposition of new bone

40
Q

What is Wolff’s law of bone?

A

Bone shape is determined by mechanical stress and that bone adapts to withstand those stresses

41
Q

What are the 7 important factors for bone growth?

A
  1. Calcium and phosphate
    1. Vitamin A
    2. Vitamin C
    3. Vitamin D
    4. Calcitonin
    5. Growth hormone
  2. Estrogen and testosterone
42
Q

What does the parathyroid hormone do?

A

maintains appropriate levels of blood calcium

43
Q

What is osteopenia?

A

Loss of bone

44
Q

What are stress fractures cause by?

A

Caused by abnormal trauma

45
Q

How do pathological factures occur?

A

Occurs in bone already weakened by disease

46
Q

How do you treat bone fractures? Define the 2 different ways

A

Closed reduction - Manipulation of fragments into their normal positions (no surgery)
Open reduction - Surgical setting involving plates