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Articular (hyline cartilage)
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- Skeletal system
- 206 Separate bones
- osteology and anthrology
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- Circulatory system
- Distributes oxygen to cells
- Transports waste products from cells
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- Digestive system
- Absorption
- Elimination
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- respiratory system
- Supplies Oxygen
- Eliminates carbon dioxide
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- urinary system
- Regulates blood
- Eliminates waste products
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- reproductive system
- Reproduces organisms
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- Nervous system
- Regulates body activities
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- Muscular system
- Allows for movement
- Skeletal, visceral and cardiac type
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- endocrine system
- Ductless glands of body
- regulates body via hormones
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- integumentary system
- protects the body
- eliminates waste through perspiration
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appendicular skeleton - 126 bones
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- long bone
- limbs
- compact bone
- spongy bone
- perioteum
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- Short bones
- carpal and tarsal bones
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- flat bones
- Calvarium, sternum, ribs, ans scapulae
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- irregular bones
- peculiar shapes (vertebrae, facial bones, and pelvic bones)
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- Primary ossification center
- Diaphysis
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- Secondary ossification centers
- Epiphyseal plate
- epiphyses
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- Primary ossification center
- Diaphysis
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- Secondary ossification centers
- Epiphysial plate
- Epiphyses
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Syndesmosis- amphiarthrodial (slightly movable)
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Suture- Synarthrodial (immovable)
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Gomphoses - amphiarthrodial (only limited movement)
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Symphyses- Amphiarthrodial (slightly movable)
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Synchondroses - Synarthrodial (immovable)
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Synovial fluid in the cavity (synovial joint)
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- Plane (gliding) joints
- permits the least amount of movement, which is a sliding of gliding motion (intermetacarpals, intercarpals, and carpometacarpal)
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- Ginglymus (hinge) joints
- they permit flexion and extension movements ONLY
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- Trochoid (pivot) Joint
- allows rotational movement around a single axis.
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Structural Classification of joints
(by tissue type)
- Fibrous (held together by fibrous tissue)
- Cartilaginous (held together by cartilage)
- Synovial (synovial fluid in joint capsule)
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How many types of fibrous joints are there?
What are they?
3
Syndesmoses - Amphiarthrodial (slightly movable)
Suture - Synarthrodial (immovable)
Gomphoses - Amphiarthrodial (only limited movement)
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Functional classification of joints
(by function)
Synarthrosis (immovable joint)
Amphiarthosis (joint with limited movement)
Diarthrosis (freely movable joint)
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Syndesmoses
fibrous types of articulatons that are held together by inerosseous ligaments and slender fibous cords that allow slight movement at these joints
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Sutures
found only between bones in teh skull. movement is very limited at these articulations; in adults these are considered immovable or synarthrodial joints.
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Gomphoses
this joint does not accur in bones, but between the roots of the teeth and the alveolar socket of the mandible and the maxillae. allows very limited movement
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how many types of cartilaginous joints are there?
what are they?
2
Symphyses- the essential feature of symphysis is the presence of a broad flattened disk of fibrocartilage between two cntiguous bony surfaces. these joints are capable of being compressed or displaced, which makes them amphiarthrodial (slightly movable)
Synchondroses- a temporary joint (epiphyseal plate) considered synarthrodial (immmovable)
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functional classification of joints
Synarthosis
immovable joint
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functional classification of joints
Amphiarthosis
joint with limited movement
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functional classification of joints
Diarthrosis
freely movable joint
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