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Get out your notes. Skeleton System Vocab Quiz. Use your Notes Define the following word on a piece of paper Osseus Porous Axial Cartilage Circulation Appendicular Calcify Brittle Flexible Sedentary. Skeletal system . Structure and Function. Structure of Bone.
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Skeleton System Vocab Quiz • Use your Notes • Define the following word on a piece of paper • Osseus • Porous • Axial • Cartilage • Circulation • Appendicular • Calcify • Brittle • Flexible • Sedentary
Skeletal system Structure and Function
Structure of Bone • Made up of osseous tissue • What does osseous mean? • Have their own blood vessels and nerves allowing for circulation • Why is this important? • Growth and healing
Structure of Bone • Cells • Osteoblasts: • bone building, bone repairing cells in the periosteum • Osteocytes: • osteoblast embedded within the bone matrix • Osteoclasts: • cells that cause absorption of bone
Structure of Bone • Periostium • Dense, fibrous membrane covering bone • Contains blood vessels • Essential for bone cell survival and bone formation
Functions of bones • Support: body structure and shape, framework • Protect: vital organs • Storage: mineralscalcium & phosphorus • Produce: blood cells • Movement: where muscles attach, allow flexibility when moved by muscles
Types of Bones • Long Bones • Longer than their width • Humerus • Radius • Ulna • Femur • Tibia • Fibula
Types of Bones • Short Bones • Length and width are nearly equal • Wrist and hands (carpals) • Ankle and feet (tarsals)
Types of Bones • Flat Bones • 2 layers of bone divided by a narrow space • Skull • Sternum • Ribs • Shoulder Blade
Types of Bones • Irregular Bones • Don’t fit into the other categories • Face • Spine • Hip
Types of Bones - Groups • Axial • Pertaining to the central structures of the body • Skull • Vertebrae • Ribs and Sternum 80 bones
Types of Bones - Groups • Appendicular • Pertaining to any body part added to the axis • Arms • Legs • Hands • Feet • Pelvis 126 Bones
Types of Bones - Groups • How many bones are in the human body???? • Axial + Appendicular = 206 bones
Bone Formation • Skeleton fully formed by 2nd month of fetal development (all cartilage) • Ossification begins after 8th week of fetal development • Childhood and adolescence: ossification exceeds bone loss • Early adulthood through middle age: ossification equals bone loss • After age 35: bone loss exceeds ossification ** Ossification – laying down of new bone tissue by osteoblasts
Joints • Where 2 bones meet • Types are classified by the amount of movement allowed • Immovable - Cranium • Slightly moveable - Vertebral discs • Free moving - All appendicular joints
Joints • Free Moving Joints • Hinge Joint • Ball and Socket Joint • Pivot Joint • Gliding Joint
Ligaments • Connect bone to bone • ACL • PCL • MCL • LCL • UCL
Tendons • Connect muscle to bone • Patellar Tendon • Bicep Tendon
Bone Markings - Purpose • Join one bone to another • Provide a surface for attachment of muscles • Create an opening for passage of blood vessels and nerves • Use as landmarks
Bone Markings • Process: bony prominence or projection • Condyle: a rounded knuckle-like prominence usually at a point of articulation • Epicondyle: small projection • Head: rounded articulating process at the end of a bone • Spine: a sharp, slender projection
Bone Markings • Tubercle: a small rounded process • Tuberosity: a large rounded process • Depression: a hollow-region or opening • Fissure: narrow, slit-like opening • Sulcus: a groove • Facet: a small area on a bone
Axial Skeleton Skull 22 Bones
Axial Skeleton Ear (12 Bones)
Axial Skeleton Ribs 12 pairs Attach posteriorly and anteriorly by costal cartilage Sternum
Axial Skeleton Vertebral Column (26 Bones) • Cervical - 7 bones • Thoracic – 12 bones • Lumbar – 5 bones • Sacral – 5 fused bones • Coccyx – 3 – 4 fused bones
Appendicular Skeleton • Shoulder Girdle • Clavicles (2): collar bones • Scapulas (2): shoulder blades
Appendicular Skeleton • Upper Extremities • Humerus: upper arm • Radius: thumb side of forearm • Ulna: little finger side of forearm • Carpals (8): wrist bones • Metacarpals (5): hand bones • Phalanges (14): finger bones
Appendicular Skeleton • Pelvic Girdle • Os Coxae (2): contains the acetabulum (hip socket) • 3 components: ilium, ischium, pubis • Also, contains the saccrum
Appendicular Skeleton • Lower Extremities • Femur: thigh bone • Patella: kneecap • Tibia: shin bone • Fibula: lateral bone of lower leg • Tarsals (7): ankle bones; talus and calcaneus • Metatarsals (5): foot bones • Phalanges (14): toe bones; great toe = halux
Fractures • Page 155 • Figure 8.12 • Draw and label in your notes • Add Oblique and Spiral after simple transverse Common Disorders of the Skeletal System • Page 153-154 • Table 8.3 • Copy the Conditions, their disorders, and their symptomsinto your notes