Lab Chapter 8: Classification and Structure of Bones and Cartilages
Process
Any bony prominence
Ramus
Armlike bar of bone
Periosteal Bud
Blood vessels, nerves, red marrow elements, osteoblasts, and osteoclasts invade ossified cavity
Sinus
Bone cavity, filled with air and lined with mucous membrane
Bone Markings
Reveal where bones form joints with the bones, where muscles, tendons, and ligaments were attached, and where blood vessels and nerves passed.
Foramen
Round or oval opening through a bone
Condyle
Rounded articular projection
Central/Haversian Canal
Runs parallel to the long axis of the bone and carries blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatic vessels through the bony matrix.
Intervertebral Discs
Separate and cushion the vertebrae
Diaphysis
Shaft
Fossa
Shallow basin-like depression in a bone, often serving as an articular surface.
Spine
Sharp, slender, often pointed projection
Tubercle
Small rounded projection or process
Facet
Smooth, nearly flat articular surface
Sesamoid Bones
Special type of short bones formed within tendons. EX: Patellas
Nasal Cartilages
Support the external nose
Skeleton
The body's framework, constructed of cartilage and bone. In embryos is made mostly of hyaline cartilage but in adults it is made of rigid bone.
Axial Skeleton
The bones that lie around the body's center of gravity.
Medullary Cavity
The central cavity of the shaft.
Epiphysis
The end of the long bone.
Yellow Marrow
The medullary cavity is essentially a storage region for adipose.
Endochondrial Ossification
The process by which all the bones in the body inferior to the skull are formed. 1. Proliferation 2. Hypertrophic 3. Calcification 4. Ossification
Perforating/Volkmann's Canals
These run at right angles to the shaft and connect the blood and nerve supply of the medullary cavity to the central canals.
Sutural Bones
Tiny bones between cranial bones
Canaliculi
Tiny canals radiating outward from a central canal to the lacunae of the first lamella and then from lamella to lamella.
Short Bones
Typically cube-shaped, and they contain more spongy bone than compact bone. EX: Tarsals and carpals
Trochanter
Very large, irregularly shaped process (only examples are on the femur)
Osteon/ Haversian System
A central canal and all the concentric lamellae surrounding it
Epiphyseal Plate
A the area of hyaline cartilage that provides for longitudinal growth of the bone during youth.
Perichondrium
Acts to resist distortion of the cartilage and bone when it is subjected to pressure and plays a role in growth and repair.
Crest
Narrow ridge of bone; usually prominent
Fissure
Narrow, slitlike opening
Ossification
New bone forms
206
Number of bones in a developed adult human body
Hypertrophic
Older cartilage cells enlarge
Epiphyseal Lines
Once the bone has stopped growing, the epiphyseal plate is replaced with bone and appear as thin barely discernible remnants.
Concentric Lamellae
Osteocytes and lacunae which are arranged in concentric circles around the central canal
Hyaline Cartilage
Provides sturdy support with some flexibility. Most skeletal cartilages are composed of this.
Epicondyle
Raised area on or above a condyle
Tracheal Bronchial Cartilages
Reinforce other passageways of the respiratory system
Appendicular Skeleton
Bones of the limbs, or appendages.
Irregular Bones
Bones that do not fall into the categories short, long, or flat. EX: Vertebrae
Head
Bony expansion carried on a narrow neck
Meatus
Canal-like passageway
Proliferation
Cartilage cells undergoing mitosis
Lacunae
Chambers
Trabeculae
Columns of bone
Spongy/Cancellous Bone
Composed of small trabeculae of cone and lots of open space
Red Marrow
Confined to the interior of the epiphyses, where it occupies the spaces between the trabeculae of spongy bone.
Costal Cartilages
Connect the ribs to the sternum
Fibrocartilage
Consists of rows of chondrocytes alternating with rows of thick collagen fibers. Has great tensile strength and can withstand heavy compression, is used to construct intervertebral discs and the cartilages within the knee joint.
Cartilage
Contain no nerves and very few blood vessels. Surrounded by a covering of perichondrium.
Articular Carilages
Cover the bone ends at moveable joints
Endosteum
Covers the trabeculae of spongy cone and lines the central perforating canals of compact bone. Contains osteogenic cells that differentiate into osteoblasts.
Perforating/Sharpey's Fibers
Fibers of the periosteum that penetrate into the bone
Periosteum
Fibrous membrane covering made up of dense irregular connective tissue.
Groove
Furrow
Flat Bones
Generally thin, with two wafer-like layers of compact bone sandwiching a thick layer of spongy bone between them. Many of these bones are actually curved. EX: Bones of the skull
Notch
Indentation at the edge of a structure
Tuberosity
Large rounded projection; may be roughened
Laryngeal Cartilages
Largely construct the larynx (voice box)
Compact Bone
Looks smooth and homogenous
Calcification
Matrix calcifies; cartilage cells die; matrix begins deteriorating; blood vessels invade cavity
Osteocytes
Mature bone cells
Long Bones
Much longer than they are wide; generally consisting of a shaft with heads at either ends. EX: Femur and phalanges
Elastic Cartilage
Much more flexible than hyaline cartilage, and tolerates repeated bending. Only the cartilages of the external ear and the epiglottis are this.
Line
Narrow ridge of bone; less prominent than a crest