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Bones and Skeletal Tissue

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Title: Bones and Skeletal Tissue


1
Chapter 6,7 8
  • Bones and Skeletal Tissue

2
Bones and Cartilages of the Human Body
Figure 6.1
3
How are bones classified?
  • Axial skeleton bones of the skull, vertebral
    column, and rib cage
  • Appendicular skeleton bones of the upper and
    lower limbs, shoulder, and hip

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5
Long bones
  • Long bones longer than they are wide (e.g.,
    humerus)

Figure 6.2a
6
Short bones
  • Short bones
  • Cube-shaped bones of the wrist and ankle
  • Bones that form within tendons (e.g., patella)

Figure 6.2b
7
Flat bones
  • Flat bones thin, flattened, and a bit curved
    (e.g., sternum, and most skull bones)

Figure 6.2c
8
Irregular bones
  • Irregular bones bones with complicated shapes
    (e.g., vertebrae and hip bones)

Figure 6.2d
9
What are the functions of bones?
  • Support form the framework that supports the
    body and cradles soft organs
  • Protection provide a protective case for the
    brain, spinal cord, and vital organs
  • Movement provide levers for muscles
  • Mineral storage reservoir for minerals,
    especially calcium and phosphorus
  • Blood cell formation hematopoiesis occurs
    within the marrow cavities of bones

10
What is the Gross Anatomy of Bones?
  • Compact bone dense outer layer
  • Spongy bone honeycomb of trabeculae (little
    beams) filled with red bone marrow

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What is the structure of a long bone?
  • Diaphysis
  • Tubular shaft that forms the axis of long bones
  • Composed of compact bone that surrounds the
    medullary cavity
  • Yellow bone marrow (fat) is contained in the
    medullary cavity

13
Structure of Long Bone
  • Epiphyses
  • Expanded ends of long bones
  • Exterior is compact bone, and the interior is
    spongy bone
  • Joint surface is covered with articular (hyaline)
    cartilage
  • Epiphyseal line separates the diaphysis from the
    epiphyses

14
Structure of Long Bone
Figure 6.3a,b
15
What are the bone membranes?
  • Periosteum double-layered protective membrane
  • Outer fibrous layer is dense regular CT
  • Inner osteogenic layer is composed of osteoblasts
    and osteoclasts
  • Richly supplied with nerve fibers, blood, and
    lymphatic vessels, which enter the bone via
    nutrient foramina
  • Sharpeys fibers secures the underlying bone to
    the periosteum. They are tufts of collagen
    fibers.
  • Endosteum delicate membrane covering internal
    surfaces of bone

16
Structure of Long Bone
Figure 6.3a, c
17
What is the structure of short, irregular, and
flat bones?
  • Thin plates of periosteum-covered compact bone on
    the outside with endosteum-covered spongy bone on
    the inside
  • Have no diaphysis or epiphyses
  • Contain bone marrow between the trabeculae

Figure 6.4
18
Where is the location of hematopoietic tissue
(Red Marrow)?
  • In infants
  • Found in the medullary cavity and all areas of
    spongy bone
  • In adults
  • Found in the middle of flat bones, and the head
    of the femur and humerus

19
What is microscopic structure of bone compact
bone?
  • Haversian system, or osteon the structural unit
    of compact bone
  • Lamella weight-bearing, column-like matrix
    tubes composed mainly of collagen
  • Haversian, or central canal central channel
    containing blood vessels and nerves
  • Volkmanns canals channels lying at right
    angles to the central canal, connecting blood and
    nerve supply of the periosteum to that of the
    Haversian canal

20
Microscopic Structure of Bone Compact Bone
  • Osteocytes mature bone cells
  • Lacunae small cavities in bone that contain
    osteocytes
  • Canaliculi hairlike canals that connect lacunae
    to each other and the central canal

21
Microscopic Structure of Bone Compact Bone
Figure 6.5a, b
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23
What is the chemical composition of bone?
(Organic)
  • Osteoblasts bone-forming cells
  • Osteocytes mature bone cells
  • Osteoclasts large cells that reabsorb or break
    down bone matrix

24
Chemical Composition of Bone Inorganic
  • Hydroxyapatites, or mineral salts
  • Sixty-five percent of bone by mass
  • Mainly calcium phosphates
  • Responsible for bone hardness and its resistance
    to compression

25
What are the types of markings found on bones?
  • Bulges, depressions, and holes that serve as
  • Sites of attachment for muscles, ligaments, and
    tendons
  • Joint surfaces
  • Conduits for blood vessels and nerves

26
Bone Markings Projections Sites of Muscle and
Ligament Attachment
  • Tuberosity rounded projection
  • Crest narrow, prominent ridge of bone
  • Trochanter large, blunt, irregular surface
  • Line narrow ridge of bone

27
Bone Markings Projections Sites of Muscle and
Ligament Attachment
  • Tubercle small rounded projection
  • Epicondyle raised area above a condyle
  • Spine sharp, slender projection
  • Process any bony prominence

28
Bone Markings Projections That Help to Form
Joints
  • Head bony expansion carried on a narrow neck
  • Facet smooth, nearly flat articular surface
  • Condyle rounded articular projection
  • Ramus armlike bar of bone

29
Bone Markings Depressions and Openings
  • Meatus canal-like passageway
  • Sinus cavity within a bone
  • Fossa shallow, basinlike depression
  • Groove furrow
  • Fissure narrow, slitlike opening
  • Foramen round or oval opening through a bone

30
How do bones develop?
  • Osteogenesis and ossification the process of
    bone tissue formation, which leads to
  • The formation of the bony skeleton in embryos
  • Bone growth until early adulthood
  • Bone thickness, remodeling, and repair

31
Formation of the Bony Skeleton
  • Begins at week 8 of embryo development
  • Intramembranous ossification bone develops from
    a fibrous membrane
  • Endochondral ossification bone forms by
    replacing hyaline cartilage

32
Intramembranous ossification
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34
Functional Zones in Long Bone Growth
  • Growth zone cartilage cells undergo mitosis,
    pushing the epiphysis away from the diaphysis
  • Transformation zone older cells enlarge, the
    matrix becomes calcified, cartilage cells die,
    and the matrix begins to deteriorate
  • Osteogenic zone new bone formation occurs

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38
Long Bone Growth and Remodeling
  • Growth in length cartilage continually grows
    and is replaced by bone as shown
  • Remodeling bone is reabsorbed and added by
    appositional growth as shown

Figure 6.10
39
Fracture Repair
40
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