Lecture 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What makes up the axial skeleton

A

Skull, vertebral column, sternum, ribs. Older evolutionarily.

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2
Q

Appendicular Skeleton

A

Upper Limb (humerus, radius, ulna), Pectoral girdle (clavicle, scapula), lower limb (femur(thigh), patella, fibula, tibia (both leg)) pelvic girdle (illium, pubis, ischium are all attached by the sacral-illiac joint) make up one half of pelvic girdle, the two halves are attached by the pelvic joint

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3
Q

Vertebral column, types of ribs and how many of each

A

Cervical spine (C7), Thoracic Spine (T12), Lumbar Spine (L5), Sacrum (5 fused bones), Coccyx (4 fused bones). Total 33 bones

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4
Q

curvature of vertebral column during development and adulthood

A

Development –> the thoracic curve is concave to the anterior, only one that exists in embryo/fetus.
Adulthood (all to the anterior)–> cervical convex (developed when head lifts), thoracic concave, lumbar convex (developed when standing/walking), sacral concave

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5
Q

Scoliosis

A

Curvature from left to right

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6
Q

Kyphosis

A

Excessive concave thoracic curvature, seen in older women (stooping)

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7
Q

Lordosis

A

Excessive convex lumbar curvature, seen in pregnant women

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8
Q

Why is the cord shorter than the vertebral column, and where does it end

A

The chord finishes developing before the vertebral column can assume full length. Ends at L1/L2. There are sacral/coccygeal cords but they extend beyond the root and some out at the vertebra below

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9
Q

Lumbar Vertebra, 2 main parts of a typical vertebra

A

The “typical” vertebra, two main parts ( body, vertebral arch).
Lumbar vertebra are the largest vertebra, because they are load-bearing

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10
Q

Parts and processes coming off of vertebral arch

A

Made of 2 pedicles coming off of body, and two lamina meeting at spinal processes
2 transverse processes, 4 articular processes (2 superior, 2 inferior), 1 spinous process

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11
Q

Cervical vertebra

A

Have transverse foramen (holes through transverse processes, vertebral artery, vertebral veins, spinal nerves pass through them), bifid spinous process, transverse plane separates articular processes.

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12
Q

Special Vertebra

A

C1–> Atlas, C2–> Axis, C7–> vertebra prominens

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13
Q

Atlas unique characteristics

A

Atlas articulates with occipital chondyle superiorly, and with the dens of Axis inferiorly. The atlas lacks a vertebral body, instead has the anterior tubercle opposing the vertebral arch, surrounding vertebral foramen.

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14
Q

Axis unique characteristics

A

Axis articulates with axis superiorly through the dens (meets with the anterior tubercle, held in place by a ligament). The dens was the atlas’s vertebral body that merged with the axis during development.

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15
Q

Atlas and Axis functions

A

atlas with occipital chondyle –> nodding head

atlas with axis –> turning head side to side

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16
Q

Thoracic vertebra unique characteristics

A

Increase in size T1-T12. Have transverse, superior and inferior costal facets. One rib articulates with it’s vertebra’s transverse and superior facets, and forms demi-facet with inferior facet of above vertebra

17
Q

sacral vertebrae,

A

Called sacral bc holy bone, was used in sacrifice, fused from 5 vertebra. Has sacral canal for nerves, posterior/anterior foramen on either side of central sacral promontory (only seen on anterior side). Articulates with L5 and coccyx.

18
Q

coccyx

A

Coccyx (coccygeal greek for cuckoo bird) fused from 3-4 vertebrae, serves as attachment site for muscles (vestigial of tails) but can be broken and cause pain (clinical relevance)

19
Q

Joint definition and types

A

Joint –> Junction of 2 parts of the skeleton. Can be either fibro-cartilaginous (unmoving, further divided into fibrous/synarthorosis or cartilaginous/amphiarthrosis) or synovial (also called diarthrosis). Many sub-types in each category

20
Q

Joints of vertebral column

A

invertebral disks, type of fibrocartilaginous joint known as a symphysis (specifically cartaliginous, allow for some movement). Make up 1/3 length of the vertebral column

21
Q

Joints of the vertebral arches

A

Zygapohyseal facet joints, type of synovial joint. zyga –> means two; apohyseal –> means joint

22
Q

Sub-occipital region joints

A

Atlanto-occipital and atlanto-axial joints are synovial

23
Q

Joints between ribs and costal processes

A

Costo-vertebral and costo-transverse (both synovial joints)

24
Q

Tendon vs. ligament; aponeurosis

A

Ligament –> Short bands of fibrous, connective tissue which attaches bone to bone, keeps structures stable
Tendon –> Fibrous connective tissue attaches muscle to bone
Aponeurosis –> Broad flat tendon that attaches muscles to bone or to other muscles

25
Q

Ligaments of vertebral column

A

Anterior longitudinal ligament–> anterior side of vertebral bodies
ligament flavium –>posterior side of vertebral foramen
posterior longitudinal ligament–> posterior side of vertebral bodies/anterior side of vertebral foramen
supraspinous ligament –> posterior side of spinal processes
interspinous ligament –> between the spinal processes

26
Q

Inter-vertebral foramen

A

Where the spinal nerve radicle (root) emerges from the spinal cord. Situated directly opposite to the intervertebral disks. Also radicular arteries that bring blood to cord enter here.

27
Q

parts of intervertebral disks

A

Anulus (means ring in latin) fibrosus on the outside, nucleus pulposus on the inside

28
Q

Direction of herniated disk

A

When nucleus pulposus either extends out or ruptures through anulus pulposus. Will happen posterio-laterally because that is the direction where there are not ligaments holding the disk in place.