Transcript Chapter 8

Chapter 1
8 Lecture
HUMAN ANATOMY
Fifth Edition
Chapter 8
The Skeletal System:
Articulations
Frederic Martini
Michael Timmons
Robert Tallitsch
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
Introduction
• Joints, or articulations, are connections
between bones that may or may not permit
movement.
– Cartilage, fluid, or dense connective tissues is
usually involved in holding joints together.
• Joints maybe classified structurally or
functionally by the amount of movement
they allow.
– Immoveable or slightly moveable joints tend
to be in the axial skeleton.
– Freely moveable joints are more common in
the appendicular skeleton.
Classification of Articulations
Structural Classifications - anatomical
Classification of Articulations Functional
• Functional Classification - physiological
Synarthroses (Immovable Joints)
• Sutures are joints found only in the skull.
– Bony edges interlock and short dense connective
tissue fiber hold the bones together.
• A gomphosis is the joint between a tooth and the
alveolar fossa of the maxillae or mandible.
– Periodontal ligaments hold the tooth to the bone in
the gomphosis.
• A synchondrosis is a joint in which hyaline
cartilage separates the ends of the bones
involved in the joint.
• A synostosis occurs if bones fuse together to
form one bone.
Amphiarthroses (Slightly Movable Joints)
• A syndesmosis occurs when to bones are
connected by relatively long connective
tissue ligaments.
• Connecting bones using a fibrocartilage
pad forms a symphysis.
Diarthroses (Freely Movable Joints)
• Synovial joints are typically found at the
ends of long bones in the upper and lower
limbs.
• All synovial joints have six basic
characteristics:
– A joint capsule
– Articular cartilages
– A joint cavity filled with synovial fluid
– A synovial membrane lining the joint capsule
– Accessory structures
– Sensory nerves and blood vessels
Synovial Joints
Figure 8.1 Structure of a Synovial Joint
Synovial Fluid
• Synovial fluid has three functions:
– Lubricates the surfaces of the articular
cartilages on the ends of the bones.
– Nourishes the chondrocytes by entering and
exiting the articular cartilages due to the
forces acting on the joint.
– Acts as a shock absorber.
Types of Movements
• Angular movements
• Rotation
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Movements
Special Movements
• Movements at the ankle include:
– Eversion/inversion
– Dorsiflexion/plantar flexion
• Movement of the vertebral column
includes:
– Lateral flexion
• Movement of the pollex (thumb):
– Opposition/reposition
Special Movements
• Movements that occur at many joints
include:
– Protraction: anterior movement in the
horizontal plane
– Retraction: posterior movement in the
horizontal plane
– Elevation: cranial movement in the vertical
axis
– Depression: caudal movement in the vertical
axis
Structural Classification of Synovial Joints
• Plane joints:
– Nonaxial or multiaxial
• Hinge joints:
– flexion and extension
• Pivot joints:
– rotational movements
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Joint Structure
Structural Classification of Synovial Joints
• Condylar joints:
– flexion/extension and abduction/adduction
• Saddle joints:
– biaxial joints that also allow circumduction
• Ball and socket joints:
– triaxial joints
The Temporomandibular Joint
Figure 8.7a,b The Temporomandibular Joint (TMJ)
Intervertebral Articulations
Figure 8.8a Anterior Vertebral Column
Figure 8.8b Lateral Vertebral Column
Vertebral Movements
• There are four possible movements of the
vertebral column:
– Anterior flexion, or bending forward
– Extension, or bending backward
– Lateral flexion, or bending to the side
– Rotation–twisting
The Sternoclavicular Joint
Figure 8.10 The Sternoclavicular Joint
The Shoulder Joint
Figure 8.11a The Anterior Shoulder
Figure 8.11b The Lateral Shoulder
The Shoulder Joint
Figure 8.11c Sectional Shoulder
Figure 8.11d Superior Shoulder
The Elbow Joint
Figure 8.12a Medial Elbow
Figure 8.12d Longitudinal Elbow
The Wrist
Figure 8.13b Wrist Joints
Figure 8.13c Wrist Ligaments
The Joints of the Hand
Figure 8.13d Joints of the Hand
The Hip Joint
Figure 8.14a Lateral Hip
Figure 8.14c Posterior Hip
The Hip Joint
Figure 8.14b Anterior Hip
Figure 8.15a Sectional Hip
The Knee
Figure 8.16a Anterior Knee
Figure 8.16b Parasagittal Knee
The Knee
Figure 8.17a Posterior Superficial
Figure 8.17b Posterior Deep
The Knee
Figure 8.17c Anterior Knee
The Ankle and Foot
Figure 8.18a Ankle and Foot
Figure 8.18b Ankle and Foot MRI