Joints + joint disease Flashcards
(40 cards)
What are the 3 main types of joint?
Fibrous
Cartilaginous
Synovial
Sutures, gomphosis, and syndesmosis are all which type of joint?
Fibrous joint
What’s the difference in contents between primary and secondary cartilaginous joints?
Primary cartilaginous joints - hyaline cartilage only
Secondary cartilaginous joints - hyaline cartilage + fibrocartilage
Is the epiphysis a primary or secondary cartilaginous joint?
Primary cartilaginous joint
What is the outer layer of hyaline cartilage called?
Perichondrium
What do chondroblasts secrete?
Cartilage matrix
In what key way do chondrocytes differ from osteocytes?
Chondrocytes can divide and secrete matrix - osteocytes cannot
The fibrous layer of the perichondrium is made up of which type of tissue and fibres?
Dense, irregular connective tissue containing type 1 collagen fibres
The cellular layer of the perichondrium contains which 2 types of cells?
Chondrogenic cells
Chondroblasts
Where do cartilage cells in the articular cartilage receive nutrients from?
Why is this?
Synovial fluid
Perichondrium is absent on articular cartilage
What are the 3 main things that make up hyaline cartilage extracellular matrix?
Aggrecan (a proteoglycan)
Water
Type II collagen fibres
What is a proteoglycan?
A core protein with glycosaminoglycans side chains attached
What are the 2 types of cartilage growth?
Appositional growth
Interstitial growth
Describe what is involved in the appositional growth of cartilage.
Chondrogenic cells in the perichondrium differentiate into chondroblasts which then secrete matrix
Describe what is involved in the interstitial growth of cartilage.
Chondrocytes divide, forming isogenous groups and secrete matrix
What method of growth is seen in articular cartilage and why?
Interstitial growth - articular cartilage lacks a perichondrium so cannot undergo appositional growth
What are the 2 main reasons mature cartilage has limited capacity to repair?
Chondrocytes are bound in lacunae - cannot migrate to areas of damage
Avascular
Which 2 key processes are involved in the development of osteoarthritis?
Degeneration of cartilage
Disordered repair
In the hand, which joints are most commonly affected in osteoarthritis?
Distal interphalangeal joints (closest to tips of fingers) and thumb
Osteoarthritis is initiated by injury to which cell type?
Chondrocytes
Describe the formation of osteoarthritis.
Chondrocytes divide and increase matrix production - cartilage swells - hypertrophic repair
Accelerated degeneration of ECM by MMPs - degeneration exceeds repair
Splitting and fissuring of the cartilage (fibrillation)
Joint space narrowing
Ulceration + full thickness erosion of cartilage
Bones rub together + become smooth (eburnation)
Thickening of subchondral bone (subchondral sclerosis)
Microfractures through articulating surface allow synovial fluid to form subchondral cysts
Osteophyte formation
Dislodged cartilage and bone form loose bodies in joints
Hyperplasia + fibrosis of synovial membrane + thickening of joint capsule
In the development of osteoarthritis, what is the ECM degraded by?
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs)
In the development of osteoarthritis, which term describes the splitting and fissuring of the cartilage?
Fibrillation
How does the joint space change during the development of osteoarthritis?
Joint space narrows