integumentary and skeletal systems

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Integumentary and Skeletal Systems Test Notes

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Integumentary and Skeletal Systems. Test Notes. Skeletal System. The skeletal system consists of : B ones Cartilage Tendons Ligaments - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Integumentary and Skeletal Systems

Test Notes

Page 2: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

The skeletal system consists of: Bones Cartilage Tendons Ligaments

Bone maintains the shape of the body, protects internal organs, is a lever system for muscles to act upon, and is a site of mineral storage and blood-cell formation.

Cartilage forms a fetal model of bone, covers the ends of bones, and provides a firm, flexible support.

Tendons attach muscle to bone. Ligaments attach bone to bone. To help you remember: LLL, TTT (ligaments are like

to like, tendons are two types)

Skeletal System

Page 3: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Skeletal System (Tendons and Ligaments)

extracellular matrix of tendons and ligaments is made up of primarily collagen fibers which makes them very tough like ropes or cables.

tendon

ligament

Page 4: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Skeletal System (Cartilage)

Three types of cartilage:

Hyaline Elastic Fibrocartilage

Hyaline cartilage is most intimately associated with bone function and development

hyaline

elastic

fibrocartilage

Page 5: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Skeletal System (Bone)

Bone Tissue Types: Cancellous (Spongy) Compact

Cancellous Bone: Located mainly in the

epiphyses of long bones & the interior of all other bones.

Consists of a lacy network of bone with many small, marrow-filled spaces.

Compact Bone: Mostly solid matrix and

cells. Forms most of the diaphysis

of long bones & the thinner surfaces of all other bones.

cancellous

compact

Page 6: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Skeletal System (Bone)

Bone is composed of an organic matrix (mostly collagen) that provides flexible strength and an inorganic matrix (hydroxyapatite) that provides compressional strength (weight bearing).

Hydroxyapatite are calcium phosphate crystals

Bone is formed in thin sheets of extracellular matrix called lamellae

Compact bone consists of cells called osteocytes located within spaces in the matrix called lacunae

Page 7: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Skeletal System (Bone)

Ossification is the formation of bone by osteoblasts

Intramembranous ossification occurs when osteoblasts begin to produce bone in connective tissue membranes (primarily in bones of the skull)

Endochondral ossification is the process that produces most of the skeleton, occurs when bones develop from cartilage models, and occurs when osteoblasts invade the spaces left by dying cartilage cells

Page 8: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Four types of bone, based on their shape: Long Short Flat Irregular

Skeletal System (Bone)

Page 9: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Long bones are longer than they are wide (bones of upper & lower limbs).

Short bones are approximately as broad as they are long (bones of ankle & wrist).

Flat bones have a relatively thin flattened shape (some skull bones, ribs, & sternum).

Irregular bones do not fit in the other shape categories (vertebrae & facial bones).

Skeletal System (Bone Shapes)

Irregular bones

Long bones

Short bones

Flat bones

Page 10: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

BONE STRUCTURE - Long Bone

1.Epiphysis2.Diaphysis3.Hyaline (Articular)

Cartilage4.Periosteum

Page 11: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Skeletal System (Bone)

a long bone has a diaphysis (shaft) and an epiphysis (each end)

the epiphyseal plate (growth plate), is the site of growth in length of a long bone, and is found between each epiphysis and the diaphysis

a long bone has a medullary cavity (filled with yellow marrow) in the diaphysis, has cancellous bone at the ends (filled with red marrow)

has an endosteum lining the medullary cavity

outer surface covered by a connective tissue layer- periosteum

Page 12: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Structure of a Long Bone

Figure 6.3a-c

Page 13: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Inside the Long Bone

Medullary Cavity – hollow chamber filled with bone marrow

Red Marrow (blood)Yellow Marrow (fat)

Endosteum– lining of the medullary

Page 14: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Types of Bone Tissue

Compact (wall of the diaphysis)Spongy (cancellous, epiphysis)

Page 16: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Microscopic Structure

MATRIX - where the bone cells live OSTEOCYTES  - mature bone cells, enclosed in tiny chambers called LACUNAE OSTEOCYTES form rings (LAMELLAE) around a HAVERSIAN CANAL which houses blood vessels Osteocytes are linked by CANALICULI Haversian Canals are linked by VOLKMAN's CANALS 

Page 17: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Compact Bone

Page 18: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems
Page 19: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

BONE DEVELOPMENT & GROWTH

1. Intramembranous bones – flat, skull2.  Endochondral bones – all other

  ALL BONES START AS HYALINE CARTILAGE, areas graduallly turn to bone         PRIMARY OSSIFICATION CENTER (shaft)        SECONDARY OSSIFICATION CENTER (ends) 

Page 20: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Bone Development & Growth

EPIPHYSEAL DISK  (growth plate) is a band of cartilage between the epiphysis and diaphysis These areas increase bone length as the cells ossify Cartilage becomes OSTEOBLASTS become OSTEOCYTES

Page 21: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

RESORPTION

OSTEOCLASTS - dissolve bone tissue to release minerals,  process is called RESORPTION

Page 22: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Bone Growth

Page 23: Integumentary  and Skeletal Systems

Bone Growth