Dr. Lea 2 INTRODUCTION TO​ CARTILAGE, BONES, JOINTS and MUSCLES Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 2 functional parts of the skeletal system?

8.5.6

A

Axial Skeleton

a. Bones of the head – cranium or skull
b. Bones of the neck – hyoid bone and cervical vertebrae
c. Bones of the trunk – ribs, sternum, vertebrae, sacrum, coccyx

Appendicular Skeleton

a. Bones of the limbs
b. Bones of the pectoral/shoulder and pelvic girdles
8. 5.6

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2
Q

What are the types of vertebrae in the vertebral column

A

7 Cervical vertebrae

12 Thoracic vertebrae

5 Lumbar vertebrae

1 Sacrum (5 fused sacral vertebrae)

1 Coccyx (4 fused coccygeal vertebra)

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3
Q

What are the 3 types of cartilage?

A
  • Hyaline cartilage - most common type, found in the ribs, nose, larynx, trachea. A precursor of bone in some locations
  • Fibrocartilage - is found in intervertebral discs, joint capsules
  • Elastic cartilage - is found in the external ear, epiglottis, and larynx
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4
Q

Why does cartilage never heal?

A

Because its avascular

8.5.6

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5
Q

What are the 5 functions of bones?

8.5.6

A
  1. Support for the body and its vital cavities; it is the chief supporting tissue of the body
  2. Protection for vital structures (e.g. heart and lungs)
  3. The mechanical basis for movement (leverage)
  4. Storage for salts (e.g. calcium & phosphorus)
  5. Hemopoiesis (blood cell production) - A continuous supply of new blood cells (produced from the marrow in the medullary cavity of many bones)
  6. 5.6
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6
Q

What are the two types of bones?

A

Compact Bone

  • Hard outer layer of the bone, made up of Haversian systems (or osteons)
  • Provides strength for weight bearing
  • In long bones designed for rigidity and attachment of muscles and ligaments, the amount of compact bone is greatest near the middle of the shaft (where bones are liable to break)
    2. Spongy or Cancellous Bone
  • Trabecular (meshwork) inner layer of the bone.
  • Where the bone marrow is located
    8. 5.6
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7
Q

What are the 6 classifications of bones?

A
  1. Long bones- ex. femur, humerus
  2. Short bones: square-ish in shape ex. wrist(carpal), ankle (tarsal) bones
  3. Flat bones – ex. skull
  4. Pneumatic bones – air filled spaces within bone ex maxilla of face
  5. Sesamoid bones – bones in tendons ex. patella (knee cap)
  6. Irregular bones – various shapes
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8
Q

What are the parts of long bones?

8.5.6

A
  • Epiphysis: knob at either end; composed of spongy bone covered by compact bone
  • Diaphysis: shaft of the long bone, almost totally composed of compact bone; hollow center lined with thin region of cancellous bone, containing marrow
  • Metaphysis: flared region between diaphysis & epiphysis
  • Epiphyseal plate: hyaline cartilage separating epiphysis & metaphysis; region of endochondral bone formation, growth in length

8.5.6

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9
Q

True or False: Periosteum is innervated by nerves that carry pain sensations.

8.5.6

A

True

8.5.6

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10
Q

Where are short bones found?

8.5.6

A

•Found in the hand and foot (carpal and tarsal bones)

Wrist - scaphoid, lunate, trapezium, trapezoid etc.

Ankle – talus, calcaneus, navicular etc

8.5.6

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11
Q

Where are flat bones found and the layers that makeup them?

A
  • Found in the vault of the skull (frontal and parietal bones)
  • Composed of an outer table of compact bone and a thin inner table separated by a layer of cancellous bone, the diploë
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12
Q

Where are pneumatic bones found?

A
  • Have mucosa lined, air filled cavities (sinuses)
  • E.g. Maxilla, ethmoid bones of the face,
  • Not seen elsewhere in body

8.5.6

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13
Q

What is the function of sesamoid bones and what is the largest?

A

•Bones which develop within tendons that pass over a joint (in order to protect the tendon)

Patella

•The function of a sesamoid bone is to alter the direction of pull of a tendon and to reduce friction on the tendon

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14
Q

What are two kinds of irregular bones?

8.5.6

A

•vertebrae, and the pelvic bones

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15
Q

Can you find the sesamoid bone in this x ray of a normal hand??

A

8.5.6

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16
Q

What are the 3 types of joints?

A

1.Synovial (most common) = freely movable (diarthrodial joints)

Hyaline cartilage and a synovial membrane ex. Hip, knee, shoulder, finger joints etc. what you commonly think of as a joint

  1. Cartilaginous (less common) = slightly movable
    a. primary=synchondrosis, ex. hyaline cartilage growth plate of kids
    b. secondary=fibrocartilage ex. intervertebral discs, pubic symphysis
  2. Fibrous (least common) = synarthrosis, syndesmosis (non-movable) ex. Sutures of the skull, gomphosis – tooth in its socket
17
Q

What are the 6 types of synovial joints?

8.5.6

A

a. Ball and socket joints
b. Hinge joint
c. Pivot joint
d. Condyloid joints
e. Saddle joints
f. Plane/gliding joint
8. 5.6

18
Q

What type of movements do ball and socket joints make and what are examples of them?

A

•Multiaxial - allows movement in multiple axes and planes

Example: Shoulder and hip joints

•Permits free movement including flexion, extension, abduction, adduction, medial rotation, lateral rotation, and circumduction

19
Q

What type of movements do hinge joints make and what are examples of them?

A

•Resembles the hinge of a door, permits flexion and extension movements only

Examples: elbow, knee, ankle joints

20
Q

What type of movements do pivot joints make and what are examples of them?

A

•Permits rotation around a single axis

1) atlantoaxial joint (atlas rotates around the finger-like process, the dens of the axis)
2) head of radius in anular ligament
8. 5.6

21
Q

What type of movements do condyloid joints make and what are examples of them?

8.5.6

A
  • Condyloid joints have convex surfaces that articulate with concave surfaces
  • Flexion, extension, abduction, and adduction are possible.
  • Biaxial (movements along 2 planes and 2 axes)
  • Circumduction is also possible

Example:

•Metacarpophalangeal joints or knuckle joints

  1. 5.6
  2. 5.6
22
Q

What type of movements do saddle joints make and what are examples of them?

8.5.6

A
  • Articular surfaces are reciprocally concave-convex and resemble a saddle on a horse’s back
  • Flexion, extension, abduction, adduction are possible
  • Biaxial (movements in 2 planes and 2 axes)
  • Circumduction is also possible

Examples: carpometacarpal joint of the thumb sternoclavicular joint

  1. 5.6
  2. 5.6
23
Q

What type of movements do plane/gliding joints make and what are examples of them?

A
  • the articular surfaces are flat or almost flat, and this permits the bones to slide/glide on one another
  • Uniaxial (movement that occurs in one plane)

Examples: acromioclavicular joints, vertebral facet joints