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Chapter 6: Osseous Tissue and Bone Structure

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Are thin with parallel surfaces. Are found in the skull, ... Metaphysis: where diaphysis and epiphysis meet. Flat Bones. Resembles a sandwich of spongy bone ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 6: Osseous Tissue and Bone Structure


1
Chapter 6 Osseous Tissue and Bone Structure
2
The Skeletal System
  • Skeletal system includes
  • bones of the skeleton
  • cartilages, ligaments, and connective tissues

3
Functions of the Skeletal System
  • Support
  • Storage of minerals (calcium)
  • Storage of lipids (yellow marrow)
  • Blood cell production (red marrow)
  • Protection
  • Leverage (force of motion)

4
Bone Shapes
  • Long bones
  • Flat bones
  • Sutural bones
  • Irregular bones
  • Short bones
  • Sesamoid bones

5
Long Bones
  • Are long and thin
  • Are found in arms, legs, hands, feet, fingers,
    and toes

Figure 61a
6
Flat Bones
  • Are thin with parallel surfaces
  • Are found in the skull, sternum, ribs, and scapula

7
Sutural Bones
  • Are small, irregular bones
  • Are found between the flat bones of the skull

8
Irregular Bones
  • Have complex shapes
  • Examples
  • spinal vertebrae
  • pelvic bones

9
Short Bones
  • Are small and thick
  • Examples
  • ankle
  • wrist bones

10
Sesamoid Bones
  • Are small and flat
  • Develop inside tendons near joints of knees,
    hands, and feet

11
Bone Markings
  • Depressions or grooves
  • along bone surface
  • Projections
  • where tendons and ligaments attach
  • at articulations with other bones
  • Tunnels
  • where blood and nerves enter bone

12
Bone Markings
Table 61 (1 of 2)
13
Bone Markings
Table 61 (2 of 2)
14
Characteristics of Bone Tissue
  • Periosteum
  • covers outer surfaces of bones
  • consist of outer fibrous and inner cellular
    layers
  • Dense matrix, containing
  • deposits of calcium salts
  • bone cells within lacunae organized around blood
    vessels
  • Canaliculi
  • form pathways for blood vessels
  • exchange nutrients and wastes

15
Long Bones
  • Diaphysis
  • the shaft
  • Epiphysis
  • wide part at each end
  • articulation with other bones
  • Metaphysis
  • where diaphysis and epiphysis meet

16
Flat Bones
  • Resembles a sandwich of spongy bone
  • Between 2 layers of compact bone

17
Compact Bone
The osteon is The basic unit of mature compact
bone Osteocytes are arranged in concentric
lamellae Around a central canal (Haversian canal)
containing blood vessels
Figure 65
18
Spongy Bone
  • Does not have osteons
  • The matrix forms an open network of trabeculae
  • Trabeculae have no blood vessels

Figure 66
19
Red Marrow
  • The space between trabeculae is filled with red
    bone marrow
  • which has blood vessels
  • forms red blood cells
  • and supplies nutrients to osteocytes

20
Yellow Marrow
  • In some bones, spongy bone holds yellow bone
    marrow
  • is yellow because it stores fat

21
Bone Cells
  • Make up only 2 of bone mass
  • osteocytes
  • osteoblasts
  • osteoprogenitor cells
  • osteoclasts

22
Osteoblasts
  • Immature bone cells that secrete matrix compounds
    (Make new bone)

Figure 63 (2 of 4)
23
Osteocytes
  • Mature bone cells that maintain the bone matrix
  • Are between layers (lamellae) of matrix
  • Connect by canaliculi in lamellae
  • Do not divide

Figure 63 (1 of 4)
24
Osteocyte Functions
  • To maintain protein and mineral content of matrix
  • To help repair damaged bone by turning into
    osteoblasts.

25
Osteoprogenitor Cells
  • Stem cells that divide to produce osteoblasts
  • Are located in inner, cellular layer of
    periosteum (endosteum)

Figure 63 (3 of 4)
26
Osteoclasts
  • Secrete acids and protein-digesting enzymes to
    dissolve old bone matrix in a process called
    osteolysis

Figure 63 (4 of 4)
27
Homeostasis
  • Bone building (by osteoblasts) and bone recycling
    (by osteoclasts) must balance
  • more breakdown than building, bones become weak
  • exercise causes osteoblasts to build more bone
  • Lack of exercise causes bone loss
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