1 / 91

BONES

BONES. Osteology = study of bones. Tissue: Connective Functions: Support Protect soft tissue Points of attachment for muscles House blood producing cells Store inorganic salts. 206 bones 2 main divisions Axial Appendicular. Axial. Head, Neck, Trunk Skull Hyoid bone

rendor
Download Presentation

BONES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BONES

  2. Osteology= study of bones

  3. Tissue: Connective • Functions: • Support • Protect soft tissue • Points of attachment for muscles • House blood producing cells • Store inorganic salts

  4. 206 bones • 2 main divisions • Axial • Appendicular

  5. Axial • Head, Neck, Trunk • Skull • Hyoid bone • Vertebral column • Thoracic Cage (ribs, 12 pairs) • Sternum

  6. APPENDICULAR • limbs and bones connecting the limbs to the: PECTORAL GIRDLE (scapula & clavicle), UPPER LIMBS (arms)PELVIC GIRDLE (coxal bones), LOWER LIMBS (legs)

  7. Bone Classification • Long bones • Short bones • Flat bones • Irregular bones * Sesamoid bones

  8. 1. Long Bones- have long longitudinal axes ad expanded ends • EX: forearm, thigh bones 2. Short Bones- cube like with lengths/ widths roughly equal • Ex: wrist, ankles

  9. 3. Flat Bones- platelike structures with broad surfaces Ex: Ribs, scapulae

  10. 4. Irregular bones- variety of shapes, connected to several bones Ex: vertebrae, facial bones 5. Sesamoid or round bones- small and nodular Ex: kneecap

  11. Long Bone • Epiphysis- expanded portion at each end of bone, articulates (forms a joint) • Diaphysis- shaft of bone • Articular cartilage- layer of hyaline cartilage • Proximal epiphysis – nearest to torso • Distal epiphysis- end furthest from torso • Periosteum- bone covered in a tough vascular covering of fibrous tissue

  12. pg 194

  13. Processes- bony projections for sites of attachment • Provide attachment sites, grooves/openings for passageways of blood vessels and nerves

  14. 2 Bone Types • Compact bone (Cortical) - tightly packed tissue, solid, strong - Wall of diaphysis • Spongy Bone (cancellous) - many branching bone plates, covered with a layer of compact bone.

  15. Medullar Cavity- hollow chamber within the diaphysis connects to spaces in spongy bone. Filled with soft specialized tissue called bone marrow. • Endosteum- thin membrane containing bone-forming cells lining medullar cavity

  16. Marrow- Red Marrow - mainly in spongy bone in adults. Produces blood cells Yellow Marrow - fat storage. Replaces much of the red marrow in diaphysis through childhood

  17. Microscopic Structures pg 196 • Bone Extracellular Matrix = collagen / inorganic salts • Osteocytes- located in tiny bony chambers called lacunae • Transport nutrients and waste

  18. Compact Bone • Osteon- (harversian system) cylinder unit around central canal • Contain blood vessels, nerve tissue, loose CT • Central canals – extend longitudinally through bone • Perforating canal (Volkmann’s canals)- transverse canals connect central canals • Contain blood vessels and nerves

  19. Spongy bone • Cells lie within trabeculae • Nutrients from subs. diffusing into the canaliculi

  20. BONE DEVELOPMENT AND GROWTH

  21. Two types of bones based on development • 1. INTRAMEMBRANOUS BONES = broad, flat bones of the skull. • form from membrane-like sheets of connective tissue • 2. ENDOCHONDRAL BONES =masses of cartilage that are later replaced by bone tissue • EX: long bones

  22. Intramembranous Bones • Osteoblasts appear in CT • Bone forming cells • Fibers appear in matrix • Calcification occurs • Deposits of salts in matrix • Osteoblasts become osteocytes

  23. Endochondral • Skeleton in cartilage • Bone replaces cartilage • Ossification centers • Areas where bone formation starts • Blood vessels penetrate cartilage

  24. ALL BONES START AS HYALINE CARTILAGE, areas gradually turn to bone • PRIMARY OSSIFICATION CENTER (shaft) • SECONDARY OSSIFICATION CENTER (ends)

  25. Epiphyseal disk (growth plate) is a band of cartilage b/w the epiphysis and diaphysis • These areas increase bone length as the cells ossify • Cartilage becomes osteoblasts become osteocytes

  26. RESORPTION • OSTEOCLASTS - dissolve bone tissue to release minerals,  process is called RESORPTION

  27. Factors Affecting Bone Growth • Absence of Calcium • Deforms bones • children= rickets • Adults= osteomalacia

  28. Lack/Excess of growth hormone • Lack - Child= pituitary dwarfism • Excess- child= pituitary gigantism

  29. Stress- causes bones to grow, lack of exercise causes bone tissue to waste away

  30. BONE FRACTURES

  31. Axial • Skull Cranium and facial bones • Hyoid bone- floats, helps with swallowing/ supports tongue • Vertebral Column • Sacrum • Coccyx • Thoracic Cage- 12 pairs of ribs and sternum

  32. Appendicular • Pectoral girdle- scapula • Clavicle • Upper limbs- humerous, radius, ulna, carpals, metacarpals, phalanges • Pelvic girdle- coxa, pelvis • Lower Limbs- femur, tibia(large), fibula(slender), patella, tarsals, metatarsals, phalanges

  33. 3 Basic Types of Joints (articulations):  1. SYNARTHROTIC – immoveable joint, such as bones in the skull, these junctions are called SUTURES 2. AMPHIARTHOTIC – slightly moveable joint, vertebrae 3. DIARTHROTIC – freely moveable joint, such as shoulders, hips, knees, elbows, wrists, fingers… --these joints are enclosed within a fibrous capsule which contains a lubricating fluid called SYNOVIAL fluid. These are called SYNOVIAL JOINTS.

  34. Cranium Bones 1. Frontal - anterior portion above eyes 2. Parietal – one on each side of the skull, just behind frontal bone 3. Occipital – forms the back of the skull and base of the cranium 4. Temporal – forms parts of the sides and base of cranium • Sphenoid – wedged between several other bones in anterior portion of the cranium • Ethomoid – form roof of nasal cavity

  35. Sutures • 1. Coronal – between frontal and parietal bones • 2. Lambdoidal – between occipital and parietal bones • 3. Squamous – between temporal and parietal bones • 4. Sagittal - between parietal bones

  36. Facial Bones immovable and 1 movable jawbone • Maxillary bones • Palatine bones • Zygomatic bones • Lacrimal bones • Nasal bones • Vomer bones • Inferior nasal conchae • mandible

  37. Foremens • Allow blood vessels/nerves to travel through bone • Supraorbital foremen • Infraorbital foremen • Mental foremen

More Related