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The Skeletal System

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Title: The Skeletal System


1
The Skeletal System
2
The Skeletal System
  • Parts of the skeletal system
  • Bones (skeleton)
  • Joints
  • Cartilages
  • Ligaments (bone to bone)(tendonbone to muscle)
  • Divided into two divisions
  • Axial skeleton forms long axis of body
  • Appendicular skeleton limbs and girdle

3
(No Transcript)
4
Functions of Bones
  • Support of the body
  • Protection of soft organs
  • Movement due to attached skeletal muscles
  • Storage of minerals and fats
  • Blood cell formation

5
Bones of the Human Body
  • The skeleton has 206 bones
  • Two basic types of bone tissue
  • Compact bone
  • Homogeneous
  • Spongy bone
  • Small needle-like pieces of bone
  • Many open spaces

6
Classification of Bones
  • Long bones
  • Typically longer than wide
  • Have a shaft with heads at both ends
  • Contain mostly compact bone
  • Examples Femur, humerus

7
Classification of Bones
  • Short bones
  • Generally cube-shape
  • Contain mostly spongy bone
  • Examples Carpals, tarsals

8
Classification of Bones on the Basis of Shape
Figure 5.1
9
Classification of Bones
  • Flat bones
  • Thin and flattened
  • Usually curved
  • Thin layers of compact bone around a layer of
    spongy bone
  • Examples Skull, ribs, sternum

10
Classification of Bones
  • Irregular bones
  • Irregular shape
  • Do not fit into other bone classification
    categories
  • Example Vertebrae and hip

11
Classification of Bones on the Basis of Shape
12
Gross Anatomy of a Long Bone
  • Diaphysis
  • Shaft
  • Composed of compact bone
  • Epiphysis
  • Ends of the bone
  • Composed mostly of spongy bone

13
Structures of a Long Bone
  • Periosteum
  • Outside covering of the diaphysis
  • Fibrous connective tissue membrane
  • Sharpeys fibers
  • Secure periosteum to underlying bone
  • Arteries
  • Supply bone cells with nutrients

14
Structures of a Long Bone
  • Articular cartilage
  • Covers the external surface of the epiphyses
  • Made of hyaline cartilage
  • Decreases friction at joint surfaces

15
Structures of a Long Bone
  • Medullary cavity
  • Cavity of the shaft
  • Contains yellow marrow (mostly fat) in adults
  • Contains red marrow (for blood cell formation) in
    infants

16
Bone Markings
  • Surface features of bones
  • Sites of attachments for muscles, tendons, and
    ligaments
  • Passages for nerves and blood vessels
  • Categories of bone markings
  • Projections and processes grow out from the
    bone surface
  • Depressions or cavities indentations

17
Bone Markings Table 7.4
18
Microscopic Anatomy of Bone
  • Osteon (Haversian System)
  • A unit of bone
  • Central (Haversian) canal
  • Opening in the center of an osteon
  • Carries blood vessels and nerves
  • Perforating (Volkmans) canal
  • Canal perpendicular to the central canal
  • Carries blood vessels and nerves

19
Microscopic Anatomy of Bone
20
Microscopic Anatomy of Bone
  • Lacunae
  • Cavities containing bone cells (osteocytes)
  • Arranged in concentric rings
  • Lamellae
  • Rings around the central canal
  • Sites of lacunae

21
Microscopic Anatomy of Bone
  • Canaliculi
  • Tiny canals
  • Radiate from the central canal to lacunae
  • Form a transport system

22
Types of Bone Cells
  • Osteocytes
  • Mature bone cells
  • Osteoblasts
  • Bone-forming cells
  • Osteoclasts
  • Bone-destroying cells
  • Break down bone matrix for remodeling and release
    of calcium
  • Bone remodeling is a process by both osteoblasts
    and osteoclasts

23
Bone Fractures
  • A break in a bone
  • Types of bone fractures
  • Closed (simple) fracture break that does not
    penetrate the skin
  • Open (compound) fracture broken bone penetrates
    through the skin
  • Bone fractures are treated by reduction and
    immobilization
  • Realignment of the bone

24
Common Types of Fractures
25
Common Types of Fractures
26
Repair of Bone Fractures
  • Hematoma (blood-filled swelling from ruptured
    blood vessels) is formed
  • Break is splinted by fibrocartilage to form a
    callus
  • Fibrocartilage callus is replaced by a bony
    callus
  • Bony callus is remodeled by osteoclasts to form a
    permanent patch

27
Stages in the Healing of a Bone Fracture
28
The Axial Skeleton
29
The Axial Skeleton
  • Forms the longitudinal part of the body
  • Divided into three parts
  • Skull
  • Vertebral column
  • Bony thorax

30
The Skull
  • Two sets of bones
  • Cranium encloses and protects the brain, and its
    surface provides attachments for muscles that
    make chewing and head movement possible.
  • 8 bones in the cranium
  • Frontal (1)
  • Parietal (2)
  • Occipital (1)
  • Temporal (2)
  • Sphenoid (1)
  • Ethmoid (1)

31
The Skull (Continued)
  • Facial bones - 14 Facial bones
  • Maxillary (2)
  • Palatine (2)
  • Zygomatic (2)
  • Lacrimal (2)
  • Nasal (2)
  • Vomer (1)
  • Inferior nasal conchae (2)
  • Mandible

32
The Skull (Continued)
  • Bones are joined by sutures (Major Sutures)
  • Squamous sutures
  • Coronal suture
  • Lambdoidal suture
  • Sagittal suture
  • Only the mandible is attached by a freely movable
    joint

33
Skull Lateral View
34
Skull Anterior View
35
Skull, Superior View
36
Skull, Inferior View
37
The Hyoid Bone
  • The only bone that does not articulate with
    another bone
  • Serves as a moveable base for the tongue

38
The Vertebral Column
  • Vertebrae separated by intervertebral discs
  • The spine has a normal curvature
  • Each vertebrae is given a name according to its
    location

39
The Vertebral Column
  • Each vertebrae is given a name according to its
    location
  • 7 cervical vertebrae are in the neck
  • 12 thoracic vertebrae are in the chest region
  • 5 lumbar vertebrae are associated with the lower
    back
  • 9 vertebrae fuse to form two composite bones
  • Sacrum
  • Coccyx

40
Structure of a Typical Vertebrae
41
Cervical Vertebrae
42
Cervical Vertebrae
43
Thoracic Vertebrae
44
Lumbar Vertebrae
45
Sacrum and Coccyx
46
The Bony Thorax
  • Forms a cage to protect major organs
  • Consists of three parts
  • Sternum manubrium, body xiphoid process
  • Ribs
  • True ribs (pairs 17)
  • False ribs (pairs 812)
  • Floating ribs (pairs 1112)
  • Thoracic vertebrae
  •  

47
The Bony Thorax
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