1 / 24

Skeletal System Part II

Skeletal System Part II. Chapter 6. Microscopic Structures of Compact Bone. Osteon (Haversian system) – weight bearing pillars Central canal – lined by endosteum, contains BVs

fidelia
Télécharger la présentation

Skeletal System Part II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Skeletal System Part II Chapter 6

  2. Microscopic Structures of Compact Bone • Osteon (Haversian system) – weight bearing pillars • Central canal – lined by endosteum, contains BVs • Perforating (Volkmann’s) canals – connect blood and nerve supply of the peristeum to the central canal and marrow cavity • Osteocytes – spider-shaped mature bone cells • Lacunae – small cavities that contain osteocyte bodies • Canaliculi (‘little canals’) – tubes that contain osteocyte ‘legs’ connecting adjacent lacunae and capillaries • Lamellae (‘little plate’) - layer of bone matrix in which collagen fibers and mineral crystals align to run in a single direction - Concentric, Interstial, Circumferential

  3. Microscopic Structure of Compact Bone Fig 6.6

  4. Spongy Bone • Trabeculae contain several layers of lamelae and osteocytes but are too small for osteons or vessels • Osteocytes receive nutrients from capillaries in the endosteum surround the trabeculae Fig 6.8

  5. Chemical Composition of Bone • 35% organic components - cells, fibers, and organic substances - abundant collagen • 65% inorganic mineral salts (hydroxyapatites) - primarily calcium phosphate crystals - pack tightly providing exceptional hardness - resists compression • Bone is composed of the proper combination of organic and inorganic elements - durable, strong, and resilient without being brittle

  6. Bone Development • Ossification (osteogenesis) – bone-tissue formation - embryo  childhood  adolescence full-grown skeleton - slower rate in adult as remodeling • Intramembranous: membrane bones developed from mesechyme (most skull bones and clavicles) - week 8, mesechyme cells cluster in CT to become osteoblasts that secrete organic bone matrix (osteoid) • Endochondral: bones (base of the skull down) that developed from hyaline cartilage - early week 8 bone begins as cartilage by end of week 8 pericondrium becomes vascularized to become bone-forming periosteum

  7. Intramembranous Ossification Fig 6.9

  8. Endochondral Ossification Fig 6.10

  9. Anatomy of Epiphyseal Growth Areas • In epiphyseal plates of growing bones cartilage is organized for quick, efficient growth - cartilage cells form tall stacks, chondroblasts at the top of stacks divide quickly - this pushes the epiphysis away from the diaphysis - lengthens entire long bone • Older chondrocytes signal surrounding matrix to calcify, then they die and disintegrate - leaves long trabeculae of calcified cartilage on diaphysis side - trabeculae partially eroded by osteoclasts - osteoblasts then cover trabeculae with bone tissue - trabeculae trimmed away from their tips by osteoclasts

  10. Epiphyseal Plate of Growing Long Bone Fig 6.11

  11. Endochondral Bone - Postnatal Growth • In chldhood and adolescence bones lengthen entirely by growth of the epiphyseal plates • Growth hormone produced by the pituitary gland stimulates epiphyseal plates • Thyroid hormone ensures the the skeleton retains proper proportions • Sex hormones (estrogen and testosterone) promote bone growth - later induces closure of epiphyseal plates

  12. Adolescence to Adulthood • At the end of adolescence, chondroblasts divide less often and epiphyseal plates become thinner - cartilage stops growing and is replaced by bone tissue • Long bones stop lengthening when the diaphysis and epiphysis fuse • Bone is dynamic living tissue - 500 mg of calcium may enter or leave the adult skeleton each day - • Cancellous bone of the skeleton is replaced every 3-4 years • Compact bone is replaced every 10 years

  13. Bone Remodeling • Growing bones widen as they lengthen - osteoblasts add bone tissue to the external surface of the diaphysis - osteoclasts – remove bone from the internal surface of the diaphysis • Appositional growth – growth of a bone by addition of bone tissue to its surface • Bone deposit and removal - occurs at periosteal and endosteal surfaces • Bone remodeling - bone deposition accomplished by osteoblasts - bone reabsorption accomplished by osteoclasts

  14. Spongy Bone Remodeling Fig 6.12

  15. Osteoclast – A Bone-Degrading Cell • A giant cell with many nuclei • Crawls along bone surfaces • Breaks down bone tissue - secretes concentrated HCl - lysosomal enzymes are released Fig 6.13

  16. Repair of Bone Fractures • Simple fracture – bone breaks cleanly and does not penetrate the skin • Compound fracture – broken ends of the bone protrude through the skin • Treatment by reduction - realignment of the broken bone ends - closed, bone ends coaxed back into position - open, bone ends are joined surgically with pins or wires

  17. Stages of Healing a Fracture Fig 6.14

  18. Characterized by low bone mass • Bone reabsorption outpaces bone desposition • Occurs most often in women after menopause

  19. Skeleton Throughout Life • Cartilage grows quickly in youth • Skeleton shows fewer chondrocytes in the elderly • Timetable from birth to death - mesoderm gives rise to embryonic mesenchyme - mesenchyme produces membranes and cartilage - membranes and cartilage ossify • Skeleton grows until the age of 18-21 years - in children and adolescents bone formation exceeds rate of bone reabsorption - in old age reabsorption predominates - bone mass declines with age

  20. Clincial Terms • Osteomalacia – bones are inadequately mineralized • Rickets – Vit D or calcium phosphate • Paget’s disease • Bone Graft • Bony Spur • Osteosarcoma • Ostealgia • Osteomyelitis • Pathologic Fracture • Traction

More Related