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WHERE AM I?. Online Anatomy Module 1. INTRO & TERMS. CELL. EPITHELIUM. CARTILAGE. MUSCLE. NERVOUS SYSTEM. AXIAL SKELETON. APPENDICULAR SKELETON. MUSCLES. EMBRYOLOGY. SKELETON & DISTINCT CARTILAGE ‘SKELETONS’. Ear cartilage. Nasal cartilage.
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WHERE AM I? Online Anatomy Module 1 INTRO & TERMS CELL EPITHELIUM CARTILAGE MUSCLE NERVOUS SYSTEM AXIAL SKELETON APPENDICULAR SKELETON MUSCLES EMBRYOLOGY
SKELETON & DISTINCT CARTILAGE ‘SKELETONS’ Ear cartilage Nasal cartilage Cartilage participates as pieces that develop, and stay attached to the skeleton Xiphoid process an extension to the breast-bone Other cartilages act as separate skeletal elements in their own right: supporting the larynx (voice-box) [feel its firmness on yourself] and the trachea (windpipe) & bronchi
CARTILAGE & ITS SITES Ears Cartilage is a firm, but flexible, pressure-resisting tissue, needed to support and connect other tissues and structures Nose Airway Ends of ribs Spine disks Joints
CARTILAGES: Technical names Auricular cartilage Ears Nasal/septal cartilage Nose Laryngeal & tracheal cartilages Airway Ends of ribs Costal cartilages Spine disks Intervertebral disks Joints Articular cartilages
CARTILAGE PG H2O Cartilage cells introduceto the tissue resistance to pressure & an ability to recover shape , principally by aggregated proteoglycans able avidly to bind water. The PGs themselves are held in place by a meshwork of fine collagen fibrils (tiny fibers). Chondrocytes make a Matrix of Collagen II fibrilmeshwork trapping aggregated ProteoglycansPGs L - Link protein L L L aggregating backbone ofHYALURONAN L PGs bind PG
CARTILAGE vertebral endplate Cartilage cells introduceto the tissue resistance to pressure & an ability to recover shape, principally by aggregated proteoglycans able avidly to bind water. The PGs themselves are held in place by a meshwork of fine collagen fibrils. Fibrocartilage is dense fibrous tissue with chondrocytes & their PGs substituted for fibroblasts Intervertebral disk is under pressure, but has tensile strength to resist bursting and pull fibrocartilage of annulus fibrosus nucleus pulposus
CARTILAGE Fibrocartilage is dense fibrous tissue with chondrocytes & their PGs substituted for fibroblasts Intervertebral disk is under pressure, but has tensile strength to resist bursting and pull fibrocartilage of annulus fibrosus Fibril orientation differs from one fibrous layer to the next nucleus pulposus
CARTILAGE Intervertebral disk is under pressure, but usually has enough tensile strength to resist bursting and pull, however fibrocartilage of annulus fibrosus nucleus pulposus Herniated/ruptured disk pressing on nerve leaving spinal canal, e.g., causing sciatica
JOINT/ARTICULAR CARTILAGE resilient, thin, lubricated, attached, living, nourished, modifiable, vulnerable Bone Joint capsule Muscle
JOINT TERMS SYNOVIUM Joint capsule j c o a i v n i t t . y Joint cartilageabsorbs and spreads load Spongy subchondral bone absorbs and directs load to shaft { loose connective tissue lining cells
SKELETON & CARTILAGE Cartilage provides some flexibility & recovery of shape at critical places Cartilage participates as pieces that develop, and stay attached to the skeleton Other cartilage develops with bones (indeed, it precedes the bone), then remains at the ends to make the joint surface or articular cartilage Facial and skull vault/dome bones form with negligible cartilage present
SKELETAL DEVELOPMENT Skeletal piece of hyaline cartilage Grows by internal expansion and from the surface Cell enlargement/hypertrophy Matrix calcification Calcified cartilage can be resorbed like bone, and be attached to bone selective erosion into mineralized cartilage
LATER ENDOCHONDRAL OSSIFICATION Articular cartilage Growth/epiphyseal plate Secondary ossificationcenters Shaft bonegrows by deposition on the outside, with mild resorption on the inside surface, plus osteonal remodelling in the interior + - Bone would belarger thanin theprevious view
JOINT CARTILAGE Chondrocytes in holes/lacunae Matrix Spongy subchondral bone layer of mineralizedcartilage for attachment to bone
PG H2O JOINT CARTILAGE Chondrocytes make a Matrix of Collagen II fibrilmeshwork trapping aggregated ProteoglycansPGs L - Link protein L L L aggregating backbone ofHYALURONAN L PGs bind PG
H2O SO4 SO4 SO4 coo H2O PROTEOGLYCAN STRUCTURE & H2O-BINDING Sugar side-chains of repeating pairs (disaccharides) } -XL- GA-GU- GA-GU- GA-GU- GA-GU- Core protein Side chains bear-bindingcharged groups which mutually repel, but cannot disperse because ofO2 bonds& anchorage to thecore protein
ARTICULAR CARTILAGE NUTRITION NutritionSYNOVIAL FLUIDLubrication Why via synovial fluid? #1 Load-bearing surface, therefore vessels would not survive Nutrition from marrow blocked by mineralized-cartilage layer
JOINT/ARTICULAR CARTILAGE Resilient - Meshwork loaded with H2O-trapping huge molecules Lubricated - Synovial fluid & its special molecules Attached - Via mineralized lowest layer to subchondral bone Living - Matrix allows diffusion to chondrocytes in lacunae Nourished - From synovial vessels via synovial fluid Modifiable- Cells continue to make & selectively destroy ECM
JOINT CARTILAGE VULNERABILITIES Thin and easily worn away(osteoarthrosis) Relies on very indirect nutrition A few cells look after extensive matrix Has nearby a loose CT (synovium) in which damaging defensive responses occur, e.g., to crystals (gout), virus? (rheumatoid arthritis) Inflammatory synovial cells release damaging enzymes into synovial fluid, or cytokine signals turning on chondrocyte ECM destruction Large ECM molecules (PGs & Collagen) easily cleaved by enzymes into useless shorter pieces
CARTILAGE TYPES Precursor to bony skeleton stays on asArticular cartilage HYALINE CARTILAGE Laryngeal pieces Airway skeleton ELASTIC CARTILAGE Tracheal rings like hyaline, but reinforced with elastic fibers a few ‘vocal’ Laryngeal pieces Auricle(“ear’) joins bones, e.g., vertebrae, & tendons to bone FIBROCARTILAGE more like dense fibrous tissue
CARTILAGES: Technical names Auricular cartilage elastic Ears Nasal/septal cartilage Nose Laryngeal & tracheal cartilages Airway Ends of ribs Costal cartilages Spine disks Intervertebral disks fibrocartilage Joints Articular cartilages The rest are hyaline, as is most of the embryonic skeleton
TYPICAL PIECE* OF CARTILAGE PERICHONDRIUM ( dense irregular CT) vessels Chondrocytes * Fibrocartilage does not occur as discrete pieces
CARTILAGE GROWTH PERICHONDRIUM Chondroblasts Appositional growth by surface cell division & differentiation Chondrocytes Interstitial growth by interior cell division & matrix depostion
JOINT COMPONENTS SYNOVIUM JOINT CAPSULE Joint cartilageabsorbs and spreads load LIGAMENT Spongy bone with struts/ trabeculae Periosteum Fibrous Osteoblastic
JOINT CAPSULE & SYNOVIUM SYNOVIUM JOINT CAPSULE JOINT SPACE Synovium lines the joint capsule, but it itself has a lining or surface
EASY SLIDING BOUNDARY LUBRICANT FIRM ELASTIC SUBSTRATE FLUID FILM FIRM ELASTIC SUBSTRATE
Hydrophilic side attaches to cartilage Bond to Hydrophobic side lowers surface energy for NON-STICK surface EASY SLIDING: Synovial Joint Attached, polar PHOSPHOLIPID molecules Articular layer or Disc Articular layer WATER + HYALURONAN + PROTEINS
SYNOVIOCYTE ROLES SYNOVIAL FLUID ‘FIBROBLAST’ synthesizes hyaluronan & glycoproteins ‘MACROPHAGE’ phagocytoses debris in the joint space SUB-INTIMA for inflammatory defensive responses
ECM MOLECULAR INTERACTIONS - Pathology 2 Unwanted degradation by bystander inclusion in cytokine signaling pathways of defensive cells IL-1 Lymphocytes of inner joint synovium MF IL-1 Joint cartilage cells also respond to the signal: enzymes enzyme inhibitors proteoglycans Articular chondrocytes = an inappropriate response causing cartilage matrix destruction - ARTHRITIS
JOINT PANNUS SYNOVIUM PANNUS is a overgrowth of inflamed synovium onto & eating into the articular cartilage Joint cartilage PTERYGIUM is a similar, but less inflamed growth of conjunctiva onto the eye’s cornea
SKELETAL DEVELOPMENT Skeletal piece of hyaline cartilage Grows by internal expansion and from the surface Cell enlargement/hypertrophy Matrix calcification Calcified cartilage can be resorbed like bone, and be attached to bone selective erosion into mineralized cartilage
EARLY ENDOCHONDRAL OSSIFICATION } EPIPHYSIS perichondrium } periosteum Bony collarprovides support as mineralized cartilage is eaten away DIAPHYSIS/SHAFT primary ossification front
LATER ENDOCHONDRAL OSSIFICATION Articular cartilage Growth/epiphyseal plate Secondary ossificationcenters Shaft bonegrows by deposition on the outside, with mild resorption on the inside surface, plus osteonal remodelling in the interior + - Bone would belarger thanin theprevious view
ZONES/LAYERS OF THE GROWTH PLATE } RESTING } PROLIFERATION } HYPERYTROPHY } CALCIFICATION } OSSIFICATION Expansion Matching erosion Osteoclasts stop the trabeculae from forever extending new boneoncalcified cartilage
Cartilage is replaced by bone. There is no transformation of cartilage into bone
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