Anatomy Of Bones And Joints Flashcards

1
Q

Joint

A

The articulation/union of two rigid structures (bone/cartilage)

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2
Q

Syndesmosis

A

A fibrous joint which unites bome with a sheet of fibrous tissue. E.g. the interosseous membrane between radius and ulna

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3
Q

Gomphosis

A

A peg-like fibrous process stabilises a tooth and provides proprioceptive information like chewing, clenching. e.g. dento-alveolar syndesmosis.

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4
Q

Suture

A

Cranial sutures

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5
Q

Primary cartilaginous/synchondroses

A

United by hyaline cartilage (articular) and only seen in children as allow bone growth.

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6
Q

Secondary cartilagenous/symphyses

A

united by fibrocartilage e.g. intervertebral discs

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7
Q

Synovial

A

Ball and socket - hip
Hinge - knee/elbow
Plane - intervertebral facet, acromioclavicular (clavicle)
Pivot - atlanto-axial
Saddle - carpometacarpal joint (wrist)
Condyloid - metacarpophalangeal joint (first knuckle)

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8
Q

Fibrous joints

A

United bone with dense fibrous connective tissue. It has high tensile strength with little movement in adults.

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9
Q

Cartilaginous

A

Articulating structures are united by hyaline /fibrocartilage.
Primary - allow for bone growth, disappear in adults, no movement.
Secondary - don’t ossify with age, found in mid-line, limited movement.

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10
Q

Synovial features

A

Greatest movement. Contains a fibrous capsule, articular cartilage, synovial membrane, synovial capsule and an articular cavity containing synovial fluid.

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11
Q

Joint stability

A

Joints are stabilised by the shape of the articulating surfaces, fibrous capsule, intrinsic and extrinsic ligaments and muscles.

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12
Q

Blood supply to joints

A

Joints recieve blood from articular arteries that arise from vessels around the joint. The arteries often anastomose to form networks which ensure a continous blood supply to a joint throughout its range of movement. Articular veins communicate like arteries. Both are found in the joint capsule mainly the synovial membrane.

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13
Q

Nerve supply to joints

A

HILTON LAW - the nerves supplying a joint also supply the muscles moving the joint and the skin covering their attachments.

Joints transmit a sensation called proprioception which provides an awareness of movement and position of the body parts.

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14
Q

Elementary joint pathologies

A

Trauma, arthritis, craniosynastosis (abnornally shaped head)

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