1 / 29

Chapter 7 Bone Tissue

Chapter 7 Bone Tissue. Dynamic tissue that continually remodels itself Bone connective tissue with a matrix hardened by minerals bones make up the skeletal system Functions of the skeletal system support, protection, movement, blood formation, mineral reservoir. Shapes of Bones.

tim
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7 Bone Tissue

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. Chapter 7Bone Tissue • Dynamic tissue that continually remodels itself • Bone • connective tissue with a matrix hardened by minerals • bones make up the skeletal system • Functions of the skeletal system • support, protection, movement, blood formation, mineral reservoir

  2. Shapes of Bones

  3. Structure of a Long Bone • Parts of a long bone are the: • Epiphysis (ends) • Diaphysis (shaft) • Medullary (marrow) cavity • Endosteum - contains osteoprogenitor cells • Periosteum - membrane around the bone • fibrous layer • osteogenic layer • Articular cartilage - hyaline cartilage covers the surface of joints

  4. HISTOLOGY OF BONE • Bone consists of widely separated cells surrounded by large amounts of matrix • Four principal types of cells: • 1. osteoprogenitor cells - unspecialized can divide • 2. osteoblasts - form bone, secrete collagen • 3. osteocytes – former osteoblasts, strain sensors that detect stress in the bone and talk to osteoblasts on the bone surface • 4. osteoclasts - reabsorb bone

  5. BONE HISTOLOGY (cont.) • Matrix contains some calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate but mostly hydroxyapatite, which is the PRIMARY salt that makes bone hard. • Matrix is deposited in a framework of collagen fibers, - calcification or mineralization • salts confer hardness on bone • collagen fibers give tensile strength • Matrix (Bone) composition = 25% water, 25% protein fibers and 50% minerals

  6. Compact Bone • Bone may be categorized as compact or spongy • Dense bone tissue consists of osteons (Haversian systems) = basic structural unit • cylinders of tissue formed from layers (lamellae) • central canal holding a blood vessel • osteocytes connected to each other and by tiny canals called canaliculi

  7. Histology of Compact Bone

  8. Blood Vessels of Compact Bone

  9. Spongy Bone • Spongelike appearance called trabeculae • spaces filled with red bone marrow • Provides strength with little weight • trabeculae develop along bone’s lines of stress • Spongy bone have few osteons, why?

  10. Spongy Bone Structure and Stress

  11. Primary Ossification Center & Marrow Space • A process called ossification (osteogenesis) forms skeleton of embryo • cells differentiate into osteoblasts and osteoclasts • Begins during the 6 or 7 th week of embryonic life and continues throughout adulthood

  12. Metaphysis & Secondary Ossification Center • Metaphysis is cartilagenous material that remains as growth plate between medullary cavity & secondary ossification centers in the epiphyses.

  13. The Fetal Skeleton at 12 Weeks

  14. Epiphyseal PlatesFuse in Adults

  15. Bone Growth and Remodeling • Grow and remodel themselves throughout life • athletes or history of manual labor have greater density & mass of bone • Most bone is formed by Endochondral ossification (IN- outward) • Step 1 = Cartilage forms • Step 2 = Cartilage grows • Step 3 = Bone replaces the cartilage from the inside center outward.

  16. Hormonal Bone Growth • Hormonal Regulation of Bone Growth • Human Growth Hormone (GH) stimulate bone deposition, in addition to thyroid hormone, parathyroid hormone, and calcitonin • variation of these hormones can lead to either gigantism or dwarfism • At puberty the sex hormones stimulate sudden growth and modify the skeleton • thyroid hormone - promotes growth and maturity • calcitonin - thyroid gland - promotes bone formation, inhibits osteoclast activity • parathyroid hormone - promotes bone resorption, increase activity of osteoclasts

  17. Mineral Resorption • Bone is the major reservoir for calcium (Ca++) • Blood level of calcium ions is very important in cardiac, nerve, enzyme, blood • If blood levels get to low, the body will pull from the bones

  18. BONE HOMEOSTASIS • Remodeling • Replacement of old bone tissue with new bone tissue • Destroyed by osteoclasts (clubbed) and is constructed by osteoblasts (built) • Increased _____ activity/ decreased _____ activity causes bone loss • Increased _____ activity/ decreased _____ activity causes bone creation

  19. Example of Bone Remodeling • Dental braces reposition teeth, creating greater pressure on the bone on one side of the tooth and less on the other side • increased pressure stimulates osteoclasts; decreased pressure stimulates osteoblasts to remodel jaw bone

  20. Fractures • Stress fracture is a break caused by abnormal trauma to a bone • car accident, fall, athletics, etc • Pathological fracture is a break in a bone weakened by some other disease • bone cancer or osteoporosis

  21. Types of Bone Fractures (Table 7.3)

  22. Healing of Fractures • Normally healing takes 8 - 12 weeks (longer in elderly) • Stages of healing • fracture hematoma (1) • granulation tissue (2) • callus formation (3) • remodeling (4) occurs over next 6 months • Electrical stimulation is used on fractures that take longer than 2 months to heal • Silica- Horsetail herb, repairs fractures

  23. Healing of Fractures 1 2 3 4

  24. Fracture and Repair I

  25. Fracture and Repair II

  26. Bone Diseases • Abnormal softness of the bones is called rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults • Paget's disease = massive osteoclastic resorption and extensive bone formation • Osteoporosis: most common bone disease • Bones lose mass & become brittle • risk of fracture of hip, wrist & vertebral column • lead to fatal complications such as pneumonia, why? • widow’s (dowager’s) hump is deformed spine • Best treatment is prevention -- exercise & calcium intake (1,500 mg/day) while young & old

  27. Effects of OsteoporosisLumbar Normal Abnormal

  28. Nutrition for good bones • Vitamins • A - controls activity of osteoblasts and osteoclasts, rarely toxic in high dosage • D - promotes removal of Calcium from the bone (1,500 mg maximum) • C - maintains the matrix • AVOID SODA DRINKS • Minerals • calcium and phosphorus - make matrix hard • magnesium - deficiency inhibits osteoblast • manganese - inhibit formation of new bone, supports ligaments (Boneless chickens)

  29. EXERCISE AND BONE • Response to mechanical stress increases deposition of mineral salts and production of collagen fibers (aids osteoporosis) • Removal of mechanical stress weakens bone through demineralization • Weight-bearing activities help build and retain bone mass

More Related