Melbourne Uni Anat Lec 8
Melbourne Uni Anat Lec 8
Melbourne Uni Anat Lec 8
Saladin, K 2001, Fig 8.2 Anatomy and Physiology, McGraw Hill, ISBN 0-070290786-X
Properties of bone
• 3 Types of cartilage:
– Hyaline
• On articular surfaces
• Parallel collagen fibres
• Glossy appearance
• Model for foetal skeleton
– Fibro
• Forms discs, meniscus, labrum
• Dense, irregular collagen fibres
– Elastic
• Elastic collagen fibres
• External ear, auditory tube, parts of
larynx
Eizenberg, Briggs, Barker & Grkovic, An@tomediaTM General Anatomy Systems
Frame 4. Melbourne, Anatomedia Publishing, 2003, ISBN: 0-734-2691-9
Bone formation: Ossification
• Intramembranous
– Flat bones of skull, clavicle,
mandible
– Fibrous tissue precursor
• Endochondral
– Long bones and most other
bones
– Hyaline cartilage precursor
12 week foetus
Eizenberg, Briggs, Barker & Grkovic, An@tomediaTM General Anatomy Systems
Frame 5. Melbourne, Anatomedia Publishing, 2003, ISBN: 0-734-2691-9
Intramembranous Ossification
• Produces flat bones of skull &
clavicle
• Steps of the process
– mesenchyme condenses into a
sheet of soft tissue
• transforms into a network of soft
trabeculae
– osteoblasts gather on the
trabeculae to form osteoid tissue
(uncalcified bone)
– osteoclasts remodel the center to
contain marrow spaces &
osteoblasts remodel the surface to
form compact bone
– mesenchyme at the surface gives
rise to periosteum Saladin, K 2001, Fig 8.2 Anatomy and Physiology, McGraw Hill, ISBN 0-070290786-X
Endochondral ossification - 1°
centres
• Hyaline cartilage model
• Bone first appears in middle of
shaft
• Cartilage progressively replaced
by bone, extending towards the
ends (epiphyses)
• Bone simultaneously formed in
periosteal and endosteal layers,
to remodel the medullary cavity
• Most other bones (eg.
vertebrae) also have primary
centres of ossification and bone
is laid down in a similar manner
Eizenberg, Briggs, Barker & Grkovic, An@tomediaTM General Anatomy Systems
Frame 5. Melbourne, Anatomedia Publishing, 2003, ISBN: 0-734-2691-9
Role of Nutrient artery
- Major artery supplying long bone
- Enters nutrient foramen
- Invades the primary centre
- Brings osteogenic cells
- bone forming cells are
osteoblasts
- bone remodelling cells are
osteoclasts
- Canal of nutrient foramen
directed away from growing end
Eizenberg, Briggs, Barker & Grkovic, An@tomediaTM General Anatomy Systems
Frame 6. Melbourne, Anatomedia Publishing, 2003, ISBN: 0-734-2691-9
Parts of a developing long bone
• Diaphysis (‘between growth’)
forms the shaft
• Epiphysis (‘upon growth’)
forms the ends
• Metaphysis (‘beyond growth’)
forms part of diaphysis
adjacent to epiphysis at each
end
– Site of remodeling and high
metabolic activity.
• Ephiphyseal growth plate b/w
metaphysis and epiphysis
Eizenberg, Briggs, Barker & Grkovic, An@tomediaTM General Anatomy Systems
Frame 6. Melbourne, Anatomedia Publishing, 2003, ISBN: 0-734-2691-9
Ossification – secondary centres
• Secondary centres of ossification
generally appear at epiphyses
• Epiphyseal arteries and
osteogenic cells invade epiphysis
• Deposit osteoblasts, erode
cartilage
• Both ends of long bones, but one
end of digits, ribs
- ‘Pressure’ epiphyses associated
with joints
- ‘Traction’ epiphyses associated
with attachments of tendons or
ligaments
- Distal femur & proximal tibia have
medico-legal significance
Author own
Author own
Achondroplastic Dwarfism
• Long bones of the limbs
stop growing but other
bones unaffected
• Spontaneous mutation in
DNA
– mutant allele is
dominant
• Chondrocytes in
metaphysis fail to
multiply and enlarge
Saladin, K 2001, Anatomy and Physiology, p. 244 McGraw Hill, ISBN 0-070290786-X
Neurovascular supply of bone
• 4 types of arteries supply a long bone:
– Nutrient (providing osteoblasts to initiate
ossification at the primary centre)
– Periosteal
– Metaphyseal
– Epiphyseal
• Concept of ‘end arteries’ & ‘anastomoses’.
• End arteries are of clinical significance.
Obstruction may lead to death (necrosis)
of the tissue they supply
Eizenberg, Briggs, Barker & Grkovic, An@tomediaTM General Anatomy Systems Aufderheide & Rodriguez-Martin Human Paleopathology, 2006. Cambridge
Clinical Ciba: Injuries to the wrist, 1970 Ciba Corporation, Plate VI Frame 9. Melbourne, Anatomedia Publishing, 2003, ISBN: 0-734-2691-9 University Press ISBN 0-521-55203-6
Age & disuse – effects on bone
Bony
outgrowths -
osteophytes
Compression fractures
common in vertebrae
Author own
Ectopic sites of bone formation &
bone pathology
• Bone may form in other
tissues, eg. viscera,
muscle