BONES%20AND%20SKELETAL%20TISSUES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

BONES%20AND%20SKELETAL%20TISSUES

Description:

Ability to spring back to its original shape after being compressed. Contains ... Fossa: furrow or shallow depression. Shallow, basinlike depression in a bone ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:169
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 138
Provided by: gerardd
Learn more at: http://www.ryanhs.org
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: BONES%20AND%20SKELETAL%20TISSUES


1
BONESANDSKELETAL TISSUES
2
SKELETAL CARTILAGES
  • Skeletal cartilages
  • Made of some variety of cartilage
  • Consists primarily of water
  • High water content accounts for its resilience
  • Ability to spring back to its original shape
    after being compressed
  • Contains no nerves or blood vessels
  • Surrounded by a layer of dense irregular
    connective tissue called the perichondrium
  • Acts like a girdle to resist outward expansion
    when the cartilage is compressed
  • Contains the blood vessels from which nutrients
    diffuse through the matrix to reach the cartilage
    cells
  • This mode of nutrient delivery limits cartilage
    thickness

3
SKELETAL CARTILAGES
  • Three types
  • Hyaline
  • Elastic
  • Fibrocartilage
  • All three types have the same basic components
  • Cells called chondrocytes
  • Encased in small cavities (lacunae) within an
    extracellular matrix containing a jellylike
    ground substance and fibers

4
HYALINE CARTILAGE
  • Looks like a frosted glass when freshly exposed
  • Provides support with flexibility and resilience
  • Most abundant skeletal cartilage
  • Chondrocytes appear spherical
  • Only fiber type in the matrix is fine collagen
    fibers

5
HYALINE CARTILAGE
6
HYALINE CARTILAGE
  • Includes
  • Articular cartilages
  • Cover the ends of most bones at movable joints
  • Costal cartilages
  • Connect the ribs to the sternum (breastbone)
  • Respiratory cartilages
  • Form the skeleton of the larynx (voicebox)
  • Reinforces other respiratory passageways
  • Nasal cartilages
  • Support the external nose

7
BONE CARTILAGE
8
ELASTIC CARTILAGE
  • Looks very much like hyaline cartilages, but they
    contain more stretchy elastic fibers and so are
    better able to stand up to repeated bending

9
ELASTIC CARTILAGE
10
ELASTIC CARTILAGE
  • More flexible than hyaline
  • Located only in the
  • External ear
  • Epiglottis of the larynx
  • Flap that bends to cover the opening of the
    larynx each time we swallow

11
BONE CARTILAGE
12
FIBROCARTILAGE
  • Highly compressible and have great tensile
    strength
  • Perfect intermediate between hyaline and elastic
    cartilages
  • Consist of roughly parallel rows of chondrocytes
    alternating with thick collagen fibers

13
FIBROCARTILAGE
14
FIBROCARTILAGE
  • Occur in sites that are subjected to both heavy
    pressure and stretch
  • Padlike cartilages (menisci) of the knee
  • Discs between vertebrae

15
BONE CARTILAGE
16
Growth of Cartilage
  • Growth occurs in two ways
  • Appositional growth (growth from the outside)
    results in outward expansion due to the
    production of cartilage matrix on the outside of
    the tissue
  • Cartilage-forming cells in the surrounding
    perichondrium secrete new matrix against the
    external face of the existing cartilage tissue
  • Interstitial growth (growth from inside) results
    in expansion from within the cartilage matrix due
    to division of lacunae-bound chondrocytes and
    secretion of matrix
  • Lacunae-bound chondrocytes divide and secrete new
    matrix, expanding the cartilage from within

17
Growth of Cartilage
  • Typically, cartilage growth ends during
    adolescence when the skeleton stops growing
  • Under certain conditionsduring normal bone
    growth in youth and during old agecalcium salts
    may be deposited in the matrix and cause it to
    harden, a process called calcification
  • NOTE calcified cartilage is NOT bone

18
CLASSIFICATION OF BONES
  • 206 named bones of the human skeleton are divided
    into two groups
  • Axial skeleton
  • Forms the long axis of the body
  • Protect, support, or carry other body parts
  • Includes
  • Skull
  • Vertebral column
  • Rib cage
  • Appendicular skeleton
  • Bones of the upper and lower limbs, and the
    girdles (pectoral/shoulder and pelvic/hip) that
    attach them to the axial skeleton
  • Help us to get from place to place (location)

19
BONE CARTILAGE
20
CLASSIFICATION OF BONES
  • Classified by shape
  • Long
  • Short
  • Flat
  • Irregular

21
BONE SHAPE
22
Long Bones
  • Longer than they are wide
  • Have a definite shaft and two ends
  • Consist of all limb bones except patellas, the
    carpels (wrist), and tarsals (ankles)
  • Named for their elongated shape, NOT their
    overall size
  • Example the three bones in your fingers (digits)
    are long bones, even though they are very small

23
BONE SHAPE
24
Short Bones
  • Somewhat cube-shaped
  • Include
  • Carpals wrist
  • Tarsals ankle
  • Sesamoid bone
  • Shaped like a sesame seed
  • Special type of bone that forms in a tendon
  • Example patella
  • Vary in size
  • Some clearly act to alter direction of pull of a
    tendon
  • Functions of others is not known

25
BONE SHAPE
26
Flat Bone
  • Thin, flattened and often curved
  • Include
  • Most skull bones
  • Sternum (breastbone)
  • Scapulae (shoulder blades)
  • Ribs

27
BONE SHAPE
28
Irregular Bones
  • Complicated shapes that do not fit in any of the
    previous classes
  • Example
  • Vertebrae
  • Coxae (hip bone)

29
BONE SHAPE
30
FUNCTIONS OF BONES
  • Besides contributing to body shape and form, our
    bones perform several important functions
  • 1. Support
  • 2. Protection
  • 3. Movement
  • 4. Mineral storage
  • 5. Blood cell formation

31
Support
  • Bones provide a framework that supports the body
    and cradles its soft organs
  • Examples
  • Bones of the lower limbs act as pillars to
    support the body trunk
  • Rib cage supports the thoracic wall

32
Protection
  • Fused bones at the skull protect the brain
  • Vertebrae surround the spinal cord
  • Rib cage helps protect the vital organs of the
    thorax

33
Movement
  • Skeletal muscles, which attach to bones by
    tendons, use bones as levers to move the body and
    its parts
  • As a result, we can walk, grasp objects, and
    breathe

34
Mineral Storage
  • Bone is a reservoir for minerals
  • Most important are calcium and phosphates
  • Stored minerals are released into the bloodstream
    as needed for distribution to all parts of the
    body
  • Deposits and withdrawals of minerals to and from
    the bones go on almost continuously

35
Blood Cell Formation
  • Most blood cell formation (hematopoiesis) occurs
    in the marrow cavities of certain bones

36
Bone Structure
  • Because bones contain various types of tissue,
    bones are organs
  • Bone (osseous) tissue
  • Nervous tissue in their nerves
  • Cartilage tissue in their articular cartilages
  • Fibrous connective tissue lining their cavities
  • Muscle and epithelial tissues in their blood
    vessels

37
Gross Anatomy
  • Bone markings are projections, depressions, and
    openings found on the surface of bones that
    function as sites of muscle, ligament, and tendon
    attachment, as joint surfaces, and as openings
    for the passage of blood vessels and nerves

38
Names of Bone Markings
  • Projections (bulges) grow outward from the bone
    surface
  • Projections that sites of muscle and ligament
    attachment
  • Tuberosity elevated round swelling
  • Large and rounded
  • May be roughened
  • Crest elongated prominence
  • Narrow ridge
  • Usually prominent
  • Trochanter to run
  • Very large
  • Blunt
  • Irregularly shaped
  • ONLY in the femur
  • Line
  • Narrow ridge
  • Less prominent than crest
  • Tubercle little swelling
  • Small and rounded
  • Epicondyle above a knuckle (condyle)
  • Raised area on or above a condyle
  • Spine
  • Sharp, slender, often pointed projection
  • Process
  • Any bone prominence

39
Names of Bone Markings
  • Projections That Help to Form Joints
    articulation
  • Head
  • Bony expansion carried on a narrow neck
  • Facet small face
  • Smooth, nearly flat articular surface
  • Condyle knuckle
  • Rounded articular projection
  • Ramus branch
  • Armlike bar of bone

40
Names of Bone Markings
  • Depressions and openings
  • Allow blood vessels and nerves to pass
  • Meatus passage/opening
  • Canal-like passageway
  • Sinus curve, hollow
  • Cavity within a bone, filled with air and lined
    with mucous membrane
  • Fossa furrow or shallow depression
  • Shallow, basinlike depression in a bone
  • Often serves as an articular surface
  • Groove ditch
  • Furrow
  • Fissure slender deep furrow
  • Narrow, slitlike opening
  • Foramen passage/opening
  • Round or oval opening through a bone

41
Bone Textures
  • Compact
  • All bones have a dense outer layer consisting of
    compact bone that appears smooth and solid
  • Spongy Bone
  • Internal to compact bone is spongy bone, which
    consists of honeycomb, needle-like, or flat
    pieces, called trabeculae (little beam)
  • In living bones the open spaces between
    trabeculae are filled with red or yellow bone
    marrow

42
Compact/Spongy Bone
43
Typical Long Bone Structure
  • All long bones have the same general structure
  • Diaphysis dia (through) / physis (growth)
  • Tubular shaft
  • Forms the long axis of the bone
  • Constructed of a relatively thick collar of
    compact bone that surrounds a central medullary
    cavity or marrow cavity
  • In adults, the medullary cavity contains fat
    (yellow marrow) and is called the yellow bone
    marrow
  • Epiphyses epi (upon) / epiphyses (singular)
  • The ends of the bone
  • Consist of internal spongy bone covered by an
    outer layer of compact bone
  • Joint surfaces of each epiphysis is covered with
    a thin layer of articular (hyaline) cartilage,
    which cushions the opposing bone ends during
    joint movement and absorbs stress

44
LONGBONE
45
Typical Long Bone Structure
  • Epiphyseal line sometimes called the metaphysis
  • Located between the epiphyses and diaphysis in an
    adult
  • Is the remnant of the epiphyseal plate, a disc of
    hyaline cartilage that grows during childhood to
    lengthen the bone

46
LONGBONE
47
Typical Long Bone Structure
  • Membranes Periosteum
  • The external surface of the entire bone except
    the joint surfaces is covered by a glistening
    white, double-layered membrane called the
    periosteum (periaround / osteobone)
  • Outer fibrous layer is dense irregular connective
    tissue
  • Inner osteogenic layer abutting the bone surface
    consists primarily of
  • Bone-forming cells osteoblasts
  • Bone-destroying cells osteoclasts

48
LONGBONE
49
Typical Long Bone Structure
  • Membranes Periosteum
  • Richly supplied with nerve fibers, lymphatic
    vessels, and blood vessels, which enter the
    diaphysis via a nutrient foramen
  • Secured to the underlying bone by perforating
    (Sharpeys) fibers
  • Tufts of collagen fibers that extend from its
    fibrous layer into the bone matrix
  • Provides anchoring points for tendons and
    ligaments
  • At these points the perforating fibers are
    exceptionally dense

50
LONGBONE
51
Typical Long Bone Structure
  • Membranes Endosteum (within bone)
  • The internal surface of the bone is lined by a
    connective tissue membrane called the endosteum
  • Covers the trabeculae of spongy bone and lines
    the canals that pass through the compact bone
  • Like the periosteum, the endosteum contains both
    osteoblasts and osteoclasts

52
LONGBONE
53
Structure of Short, Flat, and Irregular Bones
  • Short, flat, and irregular bones consist of thin
    plates of periosteum-covered compact bone on the
    outside, and endosteum-covered spongy bone
    inside, which houses bone marrow between the
    trabeculae (no marrow cavity is present)
  • Not cylindrical
  • No shaft or epiphyses
  • Called the diploe (folded)
  • Arrangement resembles a sandwich

54
FLATBONE
55
Location of Hematopoietic Tissue in Bones
  • Hematopoietic tissue of bones, red bone marrow,
    is located within
  • The trabecular cavities of the spongy bone in
    flat bones
  • The trabecular cavities of the spongy bone of the
    epiphyses in the long bones
  • Red bone marrow is found in
  • All flat bones
  • Epiphyses, and medullary cavities of infants
  • In adults, distribution is restricted to flat
    bones and the proximal epiphyses of the humerus
    and femur
  • Hence, blood cell production in adult long bones
    routinely occurs only in the head of the femur
    and humerus
  • Red marrow found in the diploe of flat bones
    (such as the sternum) and in some irregular bones
    (such as the hip bones) is much more active in
    hematopoiesis
  • These are the sites used for obtaining red marrow
    samples
  • Yellow marrow in the medullary cavity can revert
    to red marrow if a person becomes very anemic and
    needs enhanced red blood cell production

56
Microscope Anatomy of Bone
  • Although compact bone looks dense and solid, a
    microscope reveals that it is riddled with
    passageways that serve as conduits for nerves,
    blood vessels, and lymphatic vessels

57
COMPACT BONE
58
Microscope Anatomy of BoneCompact Bone
  • The structural unit of compact bone is the
    osteon, or Haversian system
  • Each osteon is an elongated cylinder oriented
    parallel to the long axis of the bone
  • Tiny weight bearing pillars
  • Group of hollow tubes of bone matrix, one placed
    outside the next like the growth rings of a tree
    trunk
  • In diagram osteon are drawn as if pulled out
    like a telescope to illustrate the individual
    lamellae
  • Each matrix tube is a lamella (little plate), and
    for this reason compact bone is often called
    lamellar bone
  • Although all of the collagen fibers in a
    particular lamella run in a single direction, the
    collagen fibers in adjacent lamella always run in
    opposite directions
  • This alternating pattern is beautifully designed
    to withstand torsion (twisting) stressesthe
    adjacent lamella reinforce one another to resist
    twisting

59
OSTEON
60
Microscope Anatomy of BoneCompact Bone
  • Collagen fibers are not the only part of bone
    lamellae that are beautifully ordered
  • Tiny crystals of bone salts align with the
    collagen fibers and thus also alternate their
    direction in adjacent lamellae
  • Running through the core of each osteon is
  • The Central (Haversian) Canal that containing
    small blood vessels and nerve fibers that serve
    the needs of the osteons cells
  • Perforating (Volkmanns) Canals lie at right
    angles to the long axis of the bone, and connect
    the blood and nerve supply of the periosteum to
    that of the central canals and medullary cavity
  • BOTH Haversian and Volkmann Canal are lined with
    endosteum

61
COMPACT BONE
62
Microscope Anatomy of BoneCompact Bone
  • (b)Osteocytes (spider-shaped mature bone cells)
    occupy lacunae (small space, cavity, or
    depression occupied by cells) at the junctions of
    the lamellae
  • Hair-like canals called canaliculi connect the
    lacunae to each other and to the central canal
  • Tie all the osteocytes in an osteon together,
    permitting nutrients and wastes to be relayed
    from one osteocyte to the next throughout the
    osteon
  • Although bone matrix is hard and impermeable to
    nutrients, its canaliculi and cell-to-cell relays
    (via gap junctions) allow bone cells to be well
    nourished
  • Function is to maintain the bone matrix
  • If they die, the surrounding matrix is resorbed
    (remove-assimilated)

63
COMPACT BONE
64
Microscope Anatomy of BoneCompact Bone
  • Not all the lamellae in compact bone are part of
    osteons
  • (c) Lying between intact osteons are incomplete
    lamella called interstitial lamella
  • These either fill the gaps between forming
    osteons or are remnants of osteons that have been
    cut through by bone remodeling
  • (a) Circumferential lamellae are located just
    beneath the periosteum, extending around the
    entire circumference of the bone
  • Effectively resist twisting of the long bone

65
COMPACT BONE
66
Spongy Bone
  • Lacks osteons
  • Trabeculae (honeycomb network) align along lines
    of stress and help the bone resist stress as much
    as possible
  • These tiny bone struts are as carefully
    positioned as the flying buttresses of a Gothic
    cathedral
  • Irregularly arranged lamella and osteocytes
    interconnected by canaliculi
  • Nutrients reach the osteocytes by diffusing
    through the canaliculi from capillaries in the
    endosteum surrounding the trabeculae

67
LONGBONE
68
FLATBONE
69
COMPACT BONE
70
Chemical Composition of Bone
  • Organic components
  • Cells (osteoblasts, osteocytes, and osteoclasts)
  • Osteoid nonliving
  • Composed of secretions from the osteoblasts which
    contribute to the flexibility and tensile
    strength of bone that allows the bone to resist
    stretch and twisting
  • Ground substance proteoglycans and
    glycoproteins
  • Collagen fibers
  • Bonds in or between collagen molecules break
    easily on impact dissipating energy to prevent
    the force from rising to a fracture value
  • In the absence of continued or additional trauma,
    most of the bonds reform

71
Chemical Composition of Bone
  • Inorganic components
  • Make up 65 of bone by mass
  • Consist of hydroxyapatite (mineral salts) that is
    largely calcium phosphate, which accounts for the
    hardness and compression resistance of bone
  • Present in the form of tightly packed tiny
    crystals surrounding the collagen fibers in the
    extracellular matrix
  • Because of the salts they contain, bones last
    long after death and provide an enduring
    monument
  • Healthy bone is half as strong as steel in
    resisting compression and fully as strong as
    steel in resisting tension (stretching)

72
BONE DEVELOPMENT
  • Ossification and osteogenesis are synonyms
    meaning the process of bone formation (osbone /
    genesisbeginning)
  • In embryos leads to the formation of the
    skeleton
  • Early adulthood bones increase in length
  • Throughout life bones are capable of growing in
    thickness
  • Adults ossification serves mainly for bone
    remodeling and repair

73
Formation of the Bony Skeleton
  • Before week 8, the skeleton of a human embryo is
    constructed entirely from fibrous membranes and
    hyaline cartilage
  • Bone tissue begins to develop at about this time
    and eventually replaces most of the existing
    fibrous or cartilage structures
  • When a bone develops from a fibrous membrane, the
    process is intramembranous ossification, and the
    bone is called a membrane bone
  • Bone development by replacing hyaline cartilage
    is called endochondral ossification (endowithin
    / chondocartilage), and the resulting bone is
    called a cartilage (endochondral) bone

74
Intramembranous Ossification
  • Results in the formation of cranial bones of the
    skull (frontal, parietal, occipital, and temporal
    bones) and the clavicles
  • All bones formed by this process are flat bones
  • Four Major Steps 1, 2, 3, 4

75
Intramembranous Ossification
76
Intramembranous Ossification
77
Endochondral Ossification
  • Replaces hyaline cartilage, forming all bones
    below the skull except for the clavicles
  • Begins in the second month of development
  • Five Steps 1,2,3,4,5

78
Endochondral Ossification
  • 1. Initially, osteoblasts secrete osteoid,
    creating a bone collar around the diaphysis of
    the hyaline cartilage model

79
Endochondral Ossification
80
Endochondral Ossification
  • 2. Cartilage in the center of the diaphysis
    calcifies
  • Because calcified cartilage matrix is impermeable
    to diffusing nutrients, the chondrocytes die and
    deteriorate forming cavities

81
Endochondral Ossification
82
Endochondral Ossification
  • 3. The periosteal bud (nutrient artery and vein,
    lymphatics, nerve fibers, red marrow elements,
    osteoblast, and osteoclasts) invades the internal
    cavities and spongy bone forms around the
    remaining fragments of hyaline cartilage

83
Endochondral Ossification
84
Endochondral Ossification
  • 4. The diaphysis elongates as the cartilage in
    the epiphyses continue to lengthen and a
    medullary cavity forms through the action of
    osteoclasts within the center of the diaphysis

85
Endochondral Ossification
86
Endochondral Ossification
  • 5. The epiphyses ossify shortly after birth
    through the development of secondary ossification
    centers
  • When complete, hyaline cartilage remains only at
    two places
  • On the epiphyseal surfaces (articular cartilages)
  • Junction of the diaphysis and epiphysis, where it
    forms the epiphyseal plates

87
Endochondral Ossification
88
Postnatal Bone Growth
  • During infancy and youth
  • Long bones lengthen entirely by interstitial
    growth of the epiphyseal plates
  • All bones grow in thickness by appositional growth

89
Growth in Length of Long Bones
  • Side of the epiphyseal plate cartilage facing the
    epiphysis, the cartilage is relatively quiescent
    and inactive
  • Side of the epiphyseal plate cartilage abutting
    the diaphysis organizes into a pattern that
    allows fast, efficient growth (osteogenic zone)
  • As the cells divide the epiphysis is pushed away
    from the diaphysis
  • Long bone lengthens

90
LENGTH GROWTH
91
Bone Growth
92
Growth in Length of Long Bones
  • During growth, the epiphyseal plate maintains a
    constant thickness because the rate of cartilage
    growth on its epiphyseal-facing side is balanced
    by its replacement with bony tissue on its
    diaphysis-facing side

93
Bone Growth
94
Growth in Length of Long Bones
  • As adolescence draws to an end, the chondroblasts
    of the epiphyseal plates divide less often and
    the plates become thinner and thinner until they
    are entirely replaced by bone tissue
  • Longitudinal bone growth ends when the bone of
    the epiphysis and diaphysis fuses
  • This process, called epiphyseal plate closure,
    happens at about 18 years of age in females and
    21 years of age in males
  • However, an adult bone can still increase in
    diameter or thickness by appositional growth if
    stressed by excessive activity or body weight

95
Growth in Width (Thickness)
  • Growing bones widen as they lengthen
  • Increases in thickness by appositional growth

96
APPOSITIONAL GROWTH
97
Growth in Width (Thickness)
  • Osteoblast beneath the periosteum secrete bone
    matrix on the external bone surface
  • Osteoclasts on the endosteal surface of the
    diaphysis remove bone
  • There is normally slightly less breaking down
    than building up
  • This unequal process produces a thicker, stronger
    bone but prevents it from becoming too heavy

98
Appositional Growth
99
Hormonal Regulation of Bone Growth
  • During infancy and childhood, the most important
    stimulus of epiphyseal plate activity is growth
    hormone from the anterior pituitary, whose
    effects are modulated by thyroid hormone,
    ensuring that the skeleton has proper proportions
    as it grows
  • At puberty, male and female sex hormones
    (testosterone and estrogen) are released in
    increasing amounts
  • Initially these sex hormones promote the growth
    spurt typical of adolescence, as well as the
    masculinization or feminization of specific parts
    of the skeleton
  • Ultimately these hormones induct the closure of
    the epiphyseal plate ending longitudinal bone
    growth

100
BONE HOMEOSTASIS
  • Every week we recycle 5 to 7 of our bone mass,
    and as much as half a gram of calcium may enter
    or leave the adult skeleton each day
  • Spongy bone is replaced every 3-4 years
  • Compact bone, is replaced approximately every 10
    years
  • This is fortunate because when bone remains in
    place for long periods the calcium crystallizes
    and becomes very brittleripe conditions for
    fracture
  • When we break bones (most common disorder of
    bones), they undergo a remarkable process of
    self-repair

101
Bone Remodeling
  • In the adult skeleton, bone deposit and bone
    resorption (removal) occur BOTH at the surface of
    the periosteum and the surface of the endosteum
  • These two processes constitute bone remodeling
  • They are coupled and coordinated by remodeling
    units (osteoblasts and osteoclasts)
  • Osteoblast bone forming cells
  • Osteoclast large cells that resorb or break down
    bone matrix
  • In adult skeletons, bone remodeling is balanced
    bone deposit and removal, bone deposit occurs at
    a greater rate when bone is injured, and bone
    resorption allows minerals of degraded bone
    matrix to move into the blood

102
Bone Remodeling
  • Bone deposit involves osteoblasts
  • Occurs wherever bone is injured or added bone
    strength is required
  • Optimal bone deposit requires
  • Healthy diet rich in proteins
  • Vitamin C
  • Vitamin D
  • Vitamin A
  • Minerals calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, and
    manganese

103
Bone Remodeling
  • Bone Resorption accomplished by osteoclasts
  • Move along a bone surface, digging grooves called
    resorption bays as they break down the bone
    matrix
  • Secretes
  • Lysosomal enzymes that digest the organic matrix
  • Hydrochloric acid that converts the calcium salts
    into soluble forms that pass easily into solution
  • May also phagocytize the demineralized matrix and
    dead osteocytes

104
Control of Remolding
  • Regulated by two control loops
  • A negative feedback hormonal mechanism that
    maintains Ca2 homeostasis in the blood
  • Calcium is important in many physiological
    processes
  • Nerve impulses
  • Muscle contraction
  • Blood coagulation
  • Secretion by glands, nerve cells
  • Cell division
  • Responses to mechanical and gravitational forces
    acting on the skeleton
  • Daily calcium requirement is
  • 400-800 mg from birth until the age of 10
  • 1200-1500 mg from ages 11 to 24

105
Hormonal Mechanism
  • Mostly used to maintain blood calcium
    homeostasis, and balances activity of parathyroid
    hormone (PTH) and calcitonin (thyroid)

106
Hormonal Mechanism
  • Increased parathyroid hormone (PTH) level
    stimulates osteoclasts to resorb bone, releasing
    calcium to the blood
  • Osteoclasts are no respectors of matrix age
  • They break down both old and new matrix
  • ONLY osteoid (unmineralized matrix), which lacks
    calcium salts, escapes digestion
  • As blood concentrations of calcium rise, the
    stimulus for PTH release ends

107
HORMONE CONTROL
108
Hormonal Mechanism
  • Calcitonin (Thyroid)
  • Secreted when blood calcium levels rise
  • Inhibits bone resorption
  • Encourages calcium salt deposit in bone matrix,
    effectively reducing blood calcium levels
  • As blood calcium levels fall, calcitonin release
    wanes

109
HORMONE CONTROL
110
REMODELING
111
Hormonal Mechanism
  • These hormonal controls act not to preserve the
    skeletons strength or well-being but rather to
    maintain blood calcium homeostasis
  • In fact, if blood calcium levels are low for an
    extended time, the bones become so demineralized
    that they develop large, punched-out-looking
    holes
  • Thus, the bones serve as a storehouse from which
    ionic calcium is drawn as needed

112
Response to Mechanical Stress and Gravity
  • Wolffs Law Response to mechanical stress
    (muscle pull) and gravity serves the needs of the
    skeleton by keeping the bones strong where
    stressors are acting
  • A bones anatomy reflects the common stresses it
    encounters
  • Example a bone is loaded (stressed) whenever
    weight bears down on it or muscles pull on it
  • Tends to bend the bone
  • Compresses the bone on one side and subjects it
    to tension (stretching) on the other side
  • Both forces are minimal toward the center of the
    bone (cancel each other out)

113
BONE STRESS
114
Wolffs Law
  • 1. Long bones are thickest midway along the
    diaphysis, exactly where bending stresses are
    greatest (bend a stick and it will split near the
    middle
  • 2. Curved bones are thickest where they are most
    likely to buckle
  • 3. Trabeculae of spongy bone form trusses, or
    struts, along lines of compression
  • 4. Large, bony projections occur where heavy,
    active muscles attach
  • Bones of weight lifters have enormous thickenings
    at the attachment sites of the most used muscles
  • Also explains the featureless bones of the fetus
    and the atrophied bones of bedridden
    peoplesituations in which bones are not stressed

115
Control of Remolding
  • Skeleton is continuously subjected to both
    hormonal influences and mechanical forces
  • The hormonal loop determines whether and when
    remodeling occurs in response to changing blood
    calcium levels
  • Mechanical stress determines where it occurs
  • Example
  • When bone must be broken down to increase blood
    calcium levels, PTH is released and targets the
    osteoclasts
  • Mechanical forces determine which osteoclasts are
    most sensitive to PTH stimulation, so that bone
    in the least stressed areas (temporarily
    dispensable) is broken down

116
Bone Repair
  • Fractures are breaks in bones
  • Due to trauma to bones or thin, weaken bones

117
Classification of Fracture
  • Position of the bone ends after fracture
  • Nondisplaced bone ends retain their normal
    position
  • Displaced bone ends are out of normal alignment
  • Completeness of break
  • Complete bone is broken through
  • Incomplete bone is not broken through
  • Greenstick bone breaks incompletely (like green
    twig breaks)
  • Only one side of the shaft breaks the other side
    bends
  • Orientation of the break relative to the long
    axis of the bone
  • Linear parallel fracture
  • Transverse break is perpendicular to the bones
    long axis

118
Classification of Fracture
  • Whether the bone ends penetrate the skin
  • Open (compound) penetrates the skin
  • Closed (simple) does not penetrate the skin
  • Location
  • Arm, leg, etc.
  • Epiphyseal epiphysis separates from the
    diaphysis along the epiphyseal plate
  • Depressed skull bones pushed in
  • External appearance
  • Nature of break
  • Comminuted bone fractures into 3 or more pieces
  • Spiral angular

119
Bone Repair
  • Repair of fractures involves four major stages
  • 1. Hematoma formation mass of clotted blood
  • Because blood vessels are damaged
  • Bone cells deprived of nutrients die at the site
  • Tissue at the site become swollen, painful, and
    inflamed

120
BONE HEALING
121
Bone Repair
  • 2. Fibrocartilaginous callus formation
  • Formation of soft granulation tissue (soft
    callus)
  • Capillaries grow into the hematoma
  • Phagocytes invade the area
  • Fibroblasts
  • Produce collagen fibers that span the break and
    connect the bone ends
  • Osteoblasts
  • Begin forming spongy bone

122
BONE HEALING
123
Bone Repair
  • 3. Bony callus formation
  • New bone trabeculae begins to form and is
    gradually converted to bony (hard) callus

124
BONE HEALING
125
Bone Repair
  • 4. Remodeling of the bony callus
  • Excess material on the diaphysis exterior and
    within the medullary cavityis removed
  • Compact bone is laid down to reconstruct the
    shaft walls

126
BONE HEALING
127
Bone RepairNew Methods
  • 1. Electrical stimulation of fracture
  • 2. Ultrasound treatments
  • 3. Free Vascular fibular graft
  • 4. VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor
  • 5. Nanobiotechnology
  • 6. Bone Substitutes

128
HOMEOSTATIC IMBALANCE
  • Imbalances between bone deposit and bone
    resorption underline nearly every disease that
    affects the adult skeleton

129
Osteomalacia
  • Soft bones
  • Includes a number of disorders in adults in which
    the bone is inadequately mineralized
  • Osteoid is produced, but calcium salts are not
    deposited, so bones are soft and weak
  • Main symptom is pain when weight is put on the
    affected bones
  • Cause insufficient calcium or by a vitamin D
    deficiency (helps to absorb calcium)
  • Treatment drink vitamin D-fortified milk and
    exposing the skin to sunlight which stimulates
    production of vitamin D

130
Rickets
  • Inadequate mineralization of bones in children
    caused by insufficient calcium or vitamin D
    deficiency
  • Treatment drink vitamin D-fortified milk and
    exposing the skin to sunlight which stimulates
    production of vitamin D
  • Because young bones are still growing rapidly,
    rickets is much more severe than adult
    Osteomalacia
  • Bowed legs, deformities of the pelvis, skull, and
    rib cage are common

131
Osteoporosis
  • Refers to a group of disorders in which the rate
    of bone resorption exceeds the rate of formation
  • Bones become so fragile that something as simple
    as a hearty sneeze or stepping off a curb can
    cause them to break
  • Bones have normal bone matrix (intercellular
    material of a tissue), but bone mass is reduced
    and the bones become more porous and lighter
    increasing the likelihood of fractures
  • Spongy bone of the spine is most vulnerable, and
    compression fractures of the vertebrae are common
  • Femur, particular the neck, is also very
    susceptible to fracture (broken hip)

132
Osteoporosis
  • Older women are especially vulnerable to
    osteoporosis, due to the decline in estrogen
    after menopause
  • Other factors that contribute to osteoporosis
    include
  • A petite body form
  • Insufficient exercise or immobility to stress the
    bones
  • A diet poor in calcium and vitamin D
  • Abnormal vitamin D receptors
  • Smoking
  • Reduces estrogen levels
  • Hormone-related conditions
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Diabetes mellitus

133
OSTEOPOROSIS(a) Normal Bone(b) Osteoporotic
Bones
134
Pagets disease
  • Is characterized by excessive bone deposition and
    resorption, with the resulting bone abnormally
    high in spongy bone
  • High ratio of spongy bone to compact bones
  • It is a localized condition that results in
    deformation of the affected bone
  • Weaken of a region of a bone
  • Cause unknown

135
DEVELOPMENTAL ASPECTS OF BONESTIMING OF EVENTS
  • The skeleton derives from embryonic mesenchymal
    cells, with ossification occurring at precise
    times
  • Most long bones have obvious primary ossification
    centers by 12 weeks
  • At birth, most bones are well ossified, except
    for the epiphyses, which form secondary
    ossification centers
  • Throughout childhood, bone growth exceeds bone
    resorption in young adults, these processes are
    in balance in old age, resorption exceeds
    formation

136
FETAL OSSIFICATION
137
BONE REPAIR
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com