Chapter 8
fontanels
"Soft spots" on the infant's head; un ossified areas in the infant scull.
appendicular skeleton contains ____ (number) of bones that form the upper and lower _____
126; extremities
skeleton fully ossified by age __
25
Axial Skeleton contains ____ (number) bones of the ___ ___ and ____
80; head neck and torso
endosteum
A fibrous membrane that lines the medullary cavity.
sinus
A space or cavity inside some of the cranial bones.
scoliosis
Abnormal lateral (side-to-side) curvature of the vertebral column.
What is kyphosis
Abnormal thoracic curvature of vertebral column. "humpback"
lordosis
Abnormally exaggerated lumbar curvature of the vertebral column.
kyphosis
Abnormally exaggerated thoracic curvature of the vertebral column.
Articular cartilage
Absorbs shock and reduces friction. cartilage covereing joint ends of bones
canaliculi
An extremely narrow tubular passage or channel in compact bone that connect the lacunae with one another and with the central canal in each osteon. Nutrients pass from the blood vessel in the osteon through the canaliculi to the osteocytes.
Vertebral Column (In order)
Atlas, Axis, cervical (7), thoracic (12), lumbar (5), sacrum (5), coccyx
Epiphyseal fracture
Between epiphysis and diaphysis
hemopoiesis
Blood cell formation.
osteoclasts
Bone absorbing cells.
osteoblasts
Bone forming cells.
Describe structure of osteon
Bone matrix is organized into numerous structural units called osteons. Each circular, tubelike osteon is composed of calcified matrix arranged in multiple layers. Each ring is called a concentric lamella. The circular rings or lamellae surround the central canal that contains a blood vessel. Osteocytes lie between the hard layers of the lamellae in little spaces called lacunae. Tiny passages or canals called canaliculi connect the lacunae with one another and with the central canal in each osteon. Nutrients pass from the blood vessel in the osteon through the canaliculi to the osteocytes.
skull
Bones of the head and face.
vertebrae
Bones that make up the spinal column.
Trabeculae
Bony, needle-like thread portions of the spongy bone that surround the open spaces.
chondrocytes
Cartilage cells.
articular cartilage
Cartilage covering the joint ends of bones.
5 sections of The vertebral column (based on location.)
Cervical vertebrae, Thoracic vertebrae, Lumbar vertebrae, Sacrum and Coccyx
Ulnar deviation
Characteristics deformity of rheumatoid arthritis.
thorax
Chest
clavicle
Collar bone, connects the upper extremity to the axial skeleton.
What is a "dowager's hump"
Compression fractures of vertebrae --> shortened stature and kyphosis
Transverse or Volkmann canals
Connect the central canals to one another.
synovial membrane
Connective tissue membrane lining the spaces between bones and joints that secretes synovial fluid.
pelvic girdle
Connects the legs to the trunk.
compact bone
Dense bone.
periosteum
Double-layered connective tissue that covers and nourishes the bone.
epiphyses
Ends of a long bone.
Spongy bone
Found in epiphyses of bones Appears "porous" to naked eye with many open spaces Spaces contain red bone marrow Texture results from needle-like threads of bone called trabeculae
yellow bone marrow
Found in medullary cavity, composed chiefly of fat cells and functions as a fat storage area
diarthroses
Freely movable joint.
Heberden nodes
From DJD; at distal interphalangeal joint
Bouchard nodes
From DJD; at proximal interphalangeal joint
What are ligaments.
Grows out of the periosteum. Attaches Bone-Bone. bands made of fibrous connective tissue
red bone marrow
Hemopoietic tissue that manufactures red blood cells, hemoglobin, white blood cells, and thrombocytes. Located within the spongy bone. In the adult, it is chiefly in the sternum, ribs, and hipbones.
medullary cavity
Hollow area inside the diaphysis of the bone that contains yellow bone marrow.
U shaped bone located just above the larynx and below mandible that is suspended from the styloid processes of the temporal bone. ONLY bone in the body that articulates with no other bones
Hyoid
synarthroses
Immovable joint
mastoiditis
Inflammation of the air cells within the mastoid portion of the temporal bone; usually caused by infection.
epiphyseal plate
Long bone grows and ultimately becomes ossified from small centers located in both ends of the bone called epiphyses, and from a larger center located in the shaft of the bone. These growth areas are made of cartilage. As long as any cartilage, called epiphyseal plates, remains between the epiphyses and shaft of the bone, growth can continue. Growth ceases when all epiphyseal cartilage is transformed into bone.
Osteocytes
Mature bone cells (were once osteoporosis blasts). Located within lacunae. lie between the hard layers of the lamellae in little spaces called lacunae
Talus
Most important bone in foot
trabeculae
Needlelike threads of spongy bone that surround a network of spaces.
radius
One of the two bones in the forearm; located on the thumb side of the forearm.
ulna
One of the two forearm bones; located on the little finger side.
A stable circular base that supports the trunk and attaches the lower extremities to it. Made up of the sacrum and two coxal bones bound tightly by strong ligaments
Pelvic girdle
carpal
Pertaining to the wrist.
What does synovial membrane do?
Secrete synovial fluid.
diaphysis
Shaft of a long bone.
scapula
Shoulder blade.
pectoral girdle
Shoulder girdle; the scapula and clavicle.
amphiarthroses
Slightly movable joint such as the joint joining the two pubic bones.
lacunae
Space or cavity; for example, lacunae in bone contain bone cells.
Three types of joints
Synarthroses, Amphiarthroses, Diarthroses
axial skeleton
The bones of the head, neck, and torso, or trunk of the body.
appendicular skeleton
The bones of the upper and lower extremities of the body.
phalanges
The bones that make up the fingers and toes.
concentric lamella
The circular rings or lamellae surround the central canal that contains a blood vessel.
False ribs
The eighth, ninth, and tenth pairs of ribs are attached to the costal cartilage of the seventh rib pair
True ribs
The first seven pairs of ribs are attached to the sternum by costal cartilage
Floating ribs
The last two pairs of ribs are attached only to the vertebrae and seem to "float free" in the front
metacarpal
The part of the hand between the wrist and the fingers.
humerus
The second longest bone in the body; the long bone of the arm.
femur
The thigh bone, which is the longest bone in the body.
spine
The vertebral column consisting of a series of separate bones or vertebrae connected in such a way that they form a flexible curved rod.
lamella
Thin layer, as of bone.
Structural classification
Type of connective tissue that joins bones together (fibrous or cartilaginous joints) or presence of a fluid filled joint capsule
Avulsion fracture
Violent muscle contractions pull a piece of bone free
endochondral ossification
When the skeleton begins to form in a baby before birth, it consists of cartilage and fibrous structures shaped like bones. Gradually thesecartilage models become transformed into bone when the cartilage is replaced with calcified bone matrix. This process of remodeling a growing bone as it changes from a cartilage model to the characteristic shape and proportion of the adult bone is called endochondral ossification and requires the continuous activity of bone-forming cells called osteoblasts and
abduction
away
Hematopoiesis Function of bone
blood cell formation is a vital process carried on in red bone marrow, which is soft connective tissue in some bones.
site for the production of blood cells
bone marrow
Support Function of bone
bones form the body's supporting framework, giving it shape.
In general, what bones are included in the axial skeleton?
bones of the center or axis of the body. The skull, spine, chest, and the hyoid bone in the neck are all in the axial skeleton
Storage Function of bone
bones play an important part in maintaining homeostasis of blood calcium.
zone of proliferation
cartilage cells undergoing active mitosis
Most bones begin as a ____ with bone formation spreading from ____ to the _____
cartilage model; center to the ends
Adduction
close
Composite of _____ and an amorphous mixture of ____ called _____
collagenous fibers; protein and polysaccharides; ground substance
cranial flat bones have an internal and external table of _______ and in inner cancellous region called the _____
compact bone; diploe
Osteon
composed of calcified matrix arranged in multiple layers (aka haversian systems) A structural unit of compact bone
intramembranous ossification occurs within a _____ tissue membrane
connective
Cartilage
consists more of intracellular substance than cells. Innumerable collagenous fibers reinforce the matrix of both bone and cartilage; however, in cartilage, the fibers are embedded in a firm gel instead of a calcified cement substance as they are in bone. Cartilage has the flexibility of firm plastic rather than the rigidity of bone. Cartilage cells, called chondrocytes, are located in lacunae. In cartilage, lacunae are suspended in the cartilage matrix much like bubbles in a block of gelatin. There are no blood vessels in cartilage.
hydropxyaphatite
crystals of calcium and phosphate contribute to bone hardness
zone of calcification
dead or dying cartilage cells undergoing rapid calcification
osteogenesis
development of bone from small cartilage or membrane model to adult bone
bone grows in length as endochondral ossification progress from the ____ toward each _____
diaphysis; epiphysis
Tibia articulates distally with the ___ and ___
fibula and talus
Frontal bone forms the ____ and ____ part of the top of the cranium
forehead; anterior
forms the coronal suture with the two parietal bones
frontal bone
Protection Function of bone
hard bony boxes protect delicate structures enclosed within them.
A synarthrotic joint
has fibrous connective tissue growing between the articulating bones, holding them close together. Synarthroses do not allow any significant movement between the joint bones. An example of this type of joint is the cranial bones in which there is no movement.
knee
hinge joint
most common type of cartilage
hyaline
Synchondroses
hyaline cartilage present between articulating bones
Coccyx
in a child there are 3 to 5 separate vertebrae; in an adult the vertebrae are fused into one.
Sacrum
in a child there are 5 separate vertebrae that form the sacrum; in an adult the vertebrae are fused into one.
symphyses
joints in which a pad or disk of fibrocartilage connects two bones
Tibia
larger and stronger of the two leg bones. more medially and superficially located.
patella
largest sesamoid bone in the body
Osteocytes lie between the hard layers of the lamellae in little spaces called lacunae. Tiny passages or canals called canaliculi connect the lacunae with one another and with the central canal in each osteon. Nutrients pass from the blood vessel in the osteon through the canaliculi to the osteocytes.
lie between the hard layers of the lamellae in little spaces called lacunae
Thoracic vertebrae
located in the center of the back—contain 12 vertebrae
Lumbar vertebrae
located in the small of the back—contain 5 vertebrae
Cervical vertebrae
located in the upper neck region—contain 7 vertebrae
mandible
lower jaw
depression
lowers a part
In general, what bones are included in the appendicular skeleton?
made up of the upper and lower extremities or appendages. The bones of the shoulder, pectoral girdle, arms, wrists, hands, hip, pelvic girdle, legs, ankles, and feet make up the appendicular skeleton.
Inorganic salts found in bone
magnesium, sodium, sulfate, and fluoride
Structures affected by ankle injury
malleoli and articular surface of tibia
largest strongest bone of the face that forms the only movable joint of the skull with the temporal bone
mandible
Sternum composed of three parts:
manubrium, body, xiphoid process
two ____ form the keystone of the face
maxillae
bone marrow is found in the ______ of ______and in the spaces of ______
medullary cavities of long bones; spongy bone
blood vessels enter the cartilage model at the ____ of the _____
midpoint; diaphysis
retraction
moves a part backward
protraction
moves a part forward
elevation
moves a part up
Movement Function of bone
muscles are anchored to bones. As muscles contract and shorten, they pull on bones and thereby move them.
type of soft diffuse connective tissue called ______
myeloid tissue
zone of hypertrophy
older enlarged cells undergoing degenerative changes associated with calcium deposition
Bone matrix
organized into numerous structural units called osteons. Each circular, tubelike osteon is composed of calcified matrix arranged in multiple layers.
______ are clustered together in ossification center
osteoblasts
flat bone intramembranous ossification begins when groups of cells differentiate into ____
osteoblasts
Function of knee joint
permits flexion, extension, and some rotation
resting cartilage cells-
point of attachment joining the epiphysis to the shaft
articulation (definition)..... ___ and ___ act as shock absorber
point of contact between bones; synovial fluid and fossa
found in virtually all bones in an infants or childs body
red marrow
functions to produce red blood cells
red marrow
two types of marrow
red marrow/yellow marrow
Slender needlelike crystals are oriented to most effectively....
resist stress and mechanical deformation
Epiphyseal plate is composed of four layers:
resting, zone of proliferation, zone of hypertrophy, zone of calcification
Ground substance
secreted by connective tissue cells
Foot bones are held together to form _____ arches
spring
protects lungs and heart as well as supports ribs
sternum
maxilla
upper jaw
____ marrow cells become saturated with fat and are no longer active in RBC production
yellow
replaces red marrow as an individual ages
yellow marrow