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Bone Growth. Early in development, the human fetus is made entirely of cartilage. . Ossification. The process of turning soft cartilage into hard bone. Mineral deposits replace the cartilage. Ossification.
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Early in development, the human fetus is made entirely of cartilage.
Ossification • The process of turning soft cartilage into hard bone. • Mineral deposits replace the cartilage.
Ossification • In long bones (arms and legs), ossification begins at the center and moves toward the ends.
Ossification • At birth, cartilage remains in the skeleton, including at the end of long bones. • This cartilage will grow as the long bones grow, so the skeleton can increase in length.
Ossification • In the late teens/early 20’s, all the cartilage becomes replaced by bone. • This is called skeletal maturity. • No further growth in length is possible.
Bone Anatomy Bone Marrow Spongy Periosteum Compact Bone
Bone Marrow • Red Marrow- Makes red blood cells, platelets, most white blood cells. • Yellow Marrow- Makes only white blood cells. (Only found in adult bones)
Skeletal Disorders • Giantism • Acromegaly • Pituitary Dwarfism • Osteoporosis • Osteomalacia • Fibrodysplasiaossificansprogressiva (FOP) aka Stone Man Syndrome
Giantism • Hypersecretion of Growth Hormone during childhood. • Excessive Growth
Acromegaly • Hypersecretion of Growth Hormone as an adult. • Overgrowth of face, feet, hands.
Pituitary Dwarfism • Deficiency of Growth Hormone • Short long bones
Osteoporosis • Bone is degraded faster than it can be replaced. • Results in porous bones. • Fractures in vertebrate and femur become common.
Osteomalacia • “Soft bones”- lacking minerals • In childhood, called “Rickets”- more detrimental because bones are still growing.
Fibrodysplasiaossificansprogressiva (FOP) • AKA Stone Man Syndrome • Bone replaces muscles, tendons and ligaments. • Ossification spontaneously or when injured.