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BONE FUNCTIONS. support - attaches to most skeletal musclesmovement - needs articulationsprotection - brain, heart, lungs, blood forming tissue, bladdermineral reserve - Ca, P, Na, Kblood cell productionred marrowstorage of energyyellow marrow. BONE FUNCTIONS. acid-base balanceabsorb or r
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1. BONE 206 bones in adult
270 bones at birth
organization
axial skeleton- 80 bones
skull- 29 bones
vertebral column- 26 bones
thorax (ribs and sternum)- 25 bones
appendicular skeleton- 126 bones
pectoral girdle- 4 bones
upper limbs- 60 bones
pelvic girdle- 2 bones
lower limbs- 60 bones
2. BONE FUNCTIONS support - attaches to most skeletal muscles
movement - needs articulations
protection - brain, heart, lungs, blood forming tissue, bladder
mineral reserve - Ca, P, Na, K
blood cell production
red marrow
storage of energy
yellow marrow
3. BONE FUNCTIONS • acid-base balance
absorb or release alkaline salts
detoxification
removes heavy metals and other foreign elements from the blood
4. Bone Problem
Ann is a 55 year old white woman who is postmenopausal and who has done little exercise in her life
Ann has experienced a fracture of the hip and is concerned about possible osteoporosis
Ann does not understand the cause or treatment of osteoporosis
she decided to have a bone density test
5. BONE TYPES 1. Compact or dense bone
2. Spongy or cancellous bone
6. EXTERNAL ANATOMY OF LONG BONE diaphysis -- shaft
epiphysis with proximal and distal ends
medullary or marrow cavity
center of ________________
fat storage- yellow marrow
gelatinous bone marrow -- reddish jelly that replaces yellow marrow in old age
endosteum
thin layer
lines ___________ cavity
dense irregular connective tissue
contains _______________ cells
7. EXTERNAL ANATOMY OF LONG BONE periosteum
double layer of dense irregular connective tissue
outer fibrous layer
inner osteogenic layer
elastic fibers, blood vessels, bone cells
lines outside of bone
sharpey’s fibers
______________ fibers that penetrate into bone matrix
no periosteum at ends- ___________ cartilage
8. EXTERNAL ANATOMY OF LONG BONE Compact bone
outer surface of bone
Spongy bone or _________________
central regions of flat bone
within epiphyses of long bones
reduces weight of bone
forms along lines of stress
contains _________ marrow
9. RED BONE MARROW Major areas:
Ribs
Sternum
Vertebrae
Innominate bones
Head of femur
Head of humerus
10. HISTOLOGY OF COMPACT BONE Haversian systems or osteons
Haverisan canals - contains blood vessels & nerves
Volkmann's canals - perpendicular to HC
connect HC to outside blood vessels
1/2 liter of blood per minute
lamellae - ring of hard calcified intercellular substance
concentric
interstitial
circumferential
lacunae - spaces that contain _______________
canaliculi - connect osteocytes
connected by __________ junctions
11. CELLS IN BONE a. osteogenic cells
- found in cellular layer of periosteum,
endosteum and Haversian canals
- ________ cells --> osteoblasts
12. CELLS IN BONE b. osteoblasts
- produce bone matrix
- before calcium salts are deposited -- __________
- promotes deposition of calcium in the matrix
- osteoblasts become surrounded by bone and are
now called ___________
- not mitotic
13. OSTEOBLAST FORMING BONE
14. CELLS IN BONE c. Osteocytes
- cannot divide
- two functions
1. maintain and monitor protein and mineral content of matrix
2. participate in repair of damaged bone
- if released from lacunae can form ___________ or ______________cells
15. CELLS IN BONE d. osteoclasts in Howship's lacunae
- multinuclear- up to 50 nuclei
- derived from _____________
- sends out projections toward bone and secrete
two substances:
1. ___________ enzymes
- acid phosphatase
- from lysosomes and digest collagen
2. acids- _______ and ___________ acids
- dissolve bone salts
16. HISTOLOGY OF SPONGY BONE no haversian systems
thin plates called ____________
osteocytes in lacunae
canaliculi but link to surrounding red bone marrow
17. MATRIX OF BONE 1. inorganic salts- 67%
hydroxyapatite- Ca10 (PO4)6(OH)2
other salts
Mg, Na, K, CO3- not in crystal form
strontium, uranium, plutonium, lead, gold
9 of 14 of the major radioactive products from hydrogen bomb
function
allows bone to withstand __________
calcination
remove organic material by __________
18. MATRIX OF BONE 2. organic framework or osteoid -- 33%
collagenous fibers and chondrin
function
provide bone with great _________ strength
ability to resist stretching and twisting
acid treatment
remove inorganic salts with acid
leaves the protein
19. OSSIFICATION begins 6th week of embryo
continues until about age of 25
types
Intramembranous ossification
flat bones of skull, mandible and clavicle
called dermal bones
Endochondral ossification
most of the bones in the body
formed from hyaline cartilage
20. INTRAMEMBRANOUS OSSIFICATION 1. Mesenchyme cells --> osteoblasts --> osteocytes
osteoblasts secrete ___________ matrix
osteoid becomes mineralized thru crystallization of Ca salts -- using enzyme __________________
called ossification center
2. Blood vessels begin to grow
spicules meet and fuse together
21. INTRAMEMBRANOUS OSSIFICATION 3. Spongy bone gives rise to compact bone on the outside
4. Ossification is incomplete at birth
dense irregular CT left are called fontanels
_______________ at birth
most close by 12 months, all close by 24 months
22. ENDOCHONDRAL OSSIFICATION 1. Hyaline cartilage (step 1)
perichondrium
2. Bony collar (step 2)
osteoblasts gather on inner surface of perichondrium -- begin laying down bone called the bony collar
in the center, cartilage cells enlarging and dying
23. ENDOCHONDRAL OSSIFICATION 3. Primary ossification center (steps 3 and 4)
cartilage cells dying and calcified matrix begins to degenerate
blood vessels enter matrix carrying:
______________ to form bone
______________ to dissolve bone forming marrow cavity
3rd month of fetal life
24. ENDOCHONDRAL OSSIFICATION 4. Secondary ossification center (step 5)
shortly after birth in the proximal epiphysis, a secondary ossification center forms
no marrow cavity forms
at two years old secondary ossification center forms at the distal epiphysis
two areas of cartilage left after 2 years old
a. ___________ cartilage - on ends
b. ___________ plate - between primary and
secondary ossification centers
25. ENDOCHONDRAL OSSIFICATION 5. End of endochondral ossification (step 6)
for most bone, stops by ages of ________
epiphyseal plate ossifies to form the epiphyseal line
articular cartilage only remaining cartilage
found at the ends of the bone
26. PRIMARY OSSIFICATION CENTERMETAPHYSIS Zone of reserve cartilage
Zone of cell proliferation
chondrocytes multiply and become arranged into longitudinal columns of flattened lacunae
Zone of hypertrophy
chondrocytres cease to divide and hypertrophy
27. PRIMARY OSSIFICATION CENTERMETAPHYSIS 4. Zone of calcification
minerals (Ca++) are deposited in matrix
5. Zone of bone deposition
chondrocytes die
osteoblasts invade and lay down trabeculae
osteoclasts erode bone away and leave marrow cavity
osteoblasts continue to lay down compact bone on the bony collar
28. BONE GROWTH - LENGTH on epiphyseal side
chondrocytes continually reproduce by _________
on diaphyseal side
chondrocytes swell and become surrounded by calcified matrix
chondrocytes die, bone replaces chondrocytes
bone is eroded away by osteoclasts, marrow cavity forms
epiphyseal plate remains constant ______________
epiphyseal plate becomes ossified- _____________
18 years in females
20 years in males
29. BONE GROWTH - DIAMETER compact bone remains constant _____________
marrow cavity increases in diameter
balance between osteoblasts and osteoclasts not always same
30. PIEZOELECTRIC EFFECT bone is deposited in proportion to compressional load
compression causes a ________ potential at the site
remainder of bone has a _________ potential
31. REQUIREMENTS FOR BONE GROWTH 1. Salts
Ca & P
calcium is the most abundant mineral in body
stores 99% of calcium in bone
plasma - Ca++
stores 85-90% of P in bone
plasma - HPO4-2 and H2PO4-1
Mg, F, Fe, and Mn
32. REQUIREMENTS FOR BONE GROWTH 2. Vitamins
Vit. A -- stimulates chondroitin sulfate synthesis
Vit. K and B12 -- synthesis of proteins
Vit. C -- collagen synthesis and stimulates osteoblast differentiation
Vit. D3 -- forms calcitriol which causes increased absorption of Ca and P from intestine
33. REQUIREMENTS FOR BONE GROWTH 3. Hormones
calcitriol -- Ca & P absorption from small intestine
other hormones:
Growth hormone
Thyroid hormones
Glucocorticoids
Insulin
sex hormones (estrogen and testosterone)
stimulates osteoblast activity and closure of epiphyseal plate
Estrogen has a stronger effect so growth starts and stops earlier than with testosterone
anabolic steroids (testosterone) and prematurely close epiphyseal plate
34. REQUIREMENTS FOR BONE GROWTH 3. Hormones (continued)
Parathyroid hormone
from parathyroid gland
increases blood calcium - 10% fluctuation is normal
increase blood Ca by 30% --> neurons and muscles are unresponsive
decrease blood Ca by 35% --> neurons excite and may cause convulsions
works on three levels
a. Bone
increases number & activity of osteoclasts
decreases activity of osteoblasts
35. REQUIREMENTS FOR BONE GROWTH 3. Hormones (continued)
Parathyroid hormone
b. Kidney
increases reabsorption of Ca
increases excretion of P
c. Intestine
activate vitamin D3 to calcitriol
cholesterol --> (UV light) --> Vit. D3 --> calcidiol (liver) --> calcitriol (kidney, PTH)
increases absorption of Ca and P from intestine
36. REQUIREMENTS FOR BONE GROWTH 3. Hormones (continued)
Parathyroid
Hyperparathyroidism
_________ PTH
depresses nervous system
brittle bones, kidney stones
Hypoparathyroidism
_________ PTH
increased excitability of nervous system
respiratory paralysis
37. REQUIREMENTS FOR BONE GROWTH 3. Hormones (continued)
Calcitonin
from parafollicular cells or C cells of the _________
decreases blood Ca
acts mainly on bone
decrease activity of osteoclasts
increases activity & number of osteoblasts
infants - _____________
adults - ______________
accounts for movement of 0.8 grams of Ca per day
38. Problem - OsteoporosisTreatments
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
types
estrogen (ERT)
estrogen + progestin (HRT)
side effects
nausea, bloating, breast tenderness, high blood pressure and blood clots
issue of a relationship between breast cancer and estrogen use is still to be determined.
39. Problem - OsteoporosisTreatments Alendronate Sodium and Risedronate Sodium
biphosphonates (bind to hydroxyapetites)
reduces bone loss, increased bone density, and reduces risk of spine fractures and hip fractures
side effects rare - abdominal pain, nausea, heartburn, irritation of esophagus
Raloxifene
selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs)
produces increase in bone mass
side effects rare - hot flashes and deep vein thrombosis
Calcitonin
side effect - may cause allergic reaction- flushing of face and hands, urinary frequency, nausea and a skin rash
40. Problem - OsteoporosisPrevention calcium
1000 - 1300 mg per day
vitamin D
fortified dairy products, egg yolks, saltwater fish and liver
exercise
weight-bearing
bone mineral tests