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The Skeletal System

The skeletal system consists of bones, joints, cartilage, and ligaments. Bones are classified based on their shape as long, short, flat, or irregular. The skeleton is divided into the axial skeleton, which includes the skull, vertebral column, and rib cage, and the appendicular skeleton, which includes the limbs. Bones provide structure, protect organs, allow movement, store minerals, and form blood cells. The adult skeleton contains 206 bones made of compact and spongy bone tissue. Fractures are breaks in bones that are treated through reduction and immobilization.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views6 pages

The Skeletal System

The skeletal system consists of bones, joints, cartilage, and ligaments. Bones are classified based on their shape as long, short, flat, or irregular. The skeleton is divided into the axial skeleton, which includes the skull, vertebral column, and rib cage, and the appendicular skeleton, which includes the limbs. Bones provide structure, protect organs, allow movement, store minerals, and form blood cells. The adult skeleton contains 206 bones made of compact and spongy bone tissue. Fractures are breaks in bones that are treated through reduction and immobilization.
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The Skeletal System Classification of Bone

 Bones are classified on the basis of shape


into four groups
 Parts of the skeletal system  Long
 Bones (skeleton)  Flat
 Joints  Short
 Cartilages  Irregular
 Ligaments

 Two subdivisions of the skeleton


1. Axial skeleton
2. Appendicular skeleton

Functions of the Bones


 Support the body
 Protect soft organs
 Skull and vertebrae protect brain and spinal
cord
 Rib cage protects thoracic cavity organs
 Attached skeletal muscles allow
movement Classification of Bones
 Store minerals and fats
 Calcium and phosphorus
 Long bones
 Fat in the internal marrow cavity  Typically longer than they are wide
 Shaft with enlarged ends
 Blood cell formation (hematopoiesis)  Contain mostly compact bone; spongy bone at
Classification of Bones ends
 The adult skeleton has 206 bones  All of the bones of the limbs (except wrist,
 Two basic types of osseous (bone) ankle, and kneecap bones) are long bones
Examples:
tissue
 Dense, smooth, and homogeneous

 Small needlelike pieces of bone


 Many open spaces
Classification of Bones
Classification of Bones  Irregular bones
 Flat bones  Irregular shape
 Thin, flattened, and usually curved  Do not fit into other bone classification
 Two thin layers of compact bone sandwich a categories
layer of spongy bone between them Examples:
Exmples:

 Structure of Bone
 Long bone anatomy
Classification of Bones  Diaphysis (shaft)
 Short bones  Makes up most of bone’s length
 Composed of compact bone
 Generally cube-shaped
 Contain mostly spongy bone with an outer  Periosteum
layer of compact bone  Outside covering of the diaphysis
 Sesamoid bones are a type of short bone that  Fibrous connective tissue membrane
form within tendons (patella)  Perforating (Sharpey’s) fibers secure
Examples: periosteum to underlying bone
Structure of Bone
Structure of Bone
 Long bone anatomy (continued)
 Long bone anatomy (continued)
 Epiphysis (ends)
 Composed mostly of spongy bone enclosed by  Endosteum
thin layer of compact bone  Lines the inner surface of the shaft
 Made of connective tissue
 Articular cartilage
 Covers the external surface of the epiphyses  Medullary cavity
 Made of hyaline cartilage  Cavity inside the shaft
 Decreases friction at joint surfaces  Contains yellow marrow (mostly fat) in adults
 Contains red marrow for blood cell formation
in infants until age 6 or 7

Structure of Bone
 Long bone anatomy (continued)
 Epiphyseal line
 Remnant of the epiphyseal plate
 Seen in adult bones
 Epiphyseal plate
 Flat plate of hyaline cartilage seen in young,
growing bone Structure of Bone
 Causes lengthwise growth of a long bone  Bone markings
 Sites of attachments for muscles, tendons, and
ligaments
 Passages for nerves and blood vessels
 Categories of bone markings
 Projections or processes—grow out from
the bone surface
 Terms often begin with “T”
 Depressions or cavities—indentations Structure of Bone
 Terms often begin with “F”  Microscopic anatomy of compact bone
 Osteocytes
 Mature bone cells situated in bone matrix
 Lacunae
 Cavities in bone matrix that house osteocytes
 Lamellae
 Concentric circles of lacunae situated around
the central (Haversian) canal

Structure of Bone
 Microscopic anatomy of compact bone
(continued)
 Central (Haversian) canal
 Opening in the center of an osteon (Haversian
system)
 Runs lengthwise through bone
 Carries blood vessels and nerves
 Osteon (Haversian system)
 A unit of bone containing central canal and
matrix rings
 Structural and functional unit of compact bone

Structure of Bone
 Microscopic anatomy of spongy bone
 Composed of small, needlelike pieces of bone
called trabeculae and open spaces
 Open spaces are filled by marrow, blood
vessels, and nerves

Structure of Bone
 Microscopic anatomy of compact bone
(continued)
 Canaliculi
 Tiny canals
 Radiate from the central canal to lacunae
 Form a transport system connecting all bone
cells to a nutrient supply
 Perforating (Volkmann’s) canal
 Canal perpendicular to the central canal
 Carries blood vessels and nerves

Axial Skeleton
 Forms the longitudinal axis of the body
 Divided into three parts

Bone Fractures
 break in a bone
 Types of bone fractures
 Closed (simple) fracture is a break that
does not penetrate the skin
 Open (compound) fracture is a broken
bone that penetrates through the skin

 are treated by reduction and


immobilization
 Closed reduction: bones are manually
coaxed into position by physician’s hands
 Open reduction: bones are secured with
pins or wires during surgery
 Healing time is 6–8 weeks

 Repair of bone fractures involves four


major events
 Hematoma (blood-filled swelling, or bruise)
is formed
 Fibrocartilage callus forms
 Cartilage matrix, bony matrix, collagen fibers Skull
splint the broken bone  Two sets of bones form the skull
 Bony callus replaces the fibrocartilage callus 1. Cranium bones enclose the brain
 Osteoblasts and osteoclasts migrate in 2. Facial bones
 Bone remodeling occurs in response to  Hold eyes in anterior position
mechanical stresses  Allow facial muscles to express feelings
 Bones are joined by sutures
 Only the mandible is attached by a freely
movable joint
Skull
8 cranial bones protect the brain
1 Frontal bone
2 Occipital bone
3 Ethmoid bone
4 Sphenoid bone
5, 6 Parietal bones (pair)
7, 8 Temporal bones (pair)
Skull
14 facial bones
1, 2 Maxillae (pair)
3, 4 Palatine bones (pair)
5, 6 Lacrimal bones (pair)
7, 8 Zygomatic bones (pair)
9, 10 Nasal bones (pair)
11 Vomer bone
12, 13 Inferior nasal conchae (pair)
14 Mandible

Skull
 Hyoid bone
 Closely related to mandible and temporal bones
 The only bone that does not articulate with
another bone
 Serves as a movable base for the tongue
 Aids in swallowing and speech

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