Anatomy/Bones

< Anatomy
Completion status: this resource is just getting off the ground. Please feel welcome to help!

The skeletal system includes the bones, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, and other connective tissues that stabilize and interconnect the bones. There are five primary functions of this body system:

Classification of Bones

Bone Tissue

The bones of the human skeleton are comprised of two basic kinds of osseous tissue which differ in texture.

Bone Shape

The bones in the human body can be further separated into six broad categories according to their relative gross anatomy.

Bone Markings and Features

Elevations or projections appear on bones where ligaments and tendons attach and where other bones articulate at joints. Depressions, grooves and tunnels indicate the path of a nerve or vessel alongside or penetrating the bone. Some of the various features of bones are described in the following table.

Common Bone Features
General Description Anatomical Term Definition
Projections formed where tendons and ligaments attach Crest A narrow, prominent ridge of bone
Epicondyle An eminence on or superior to a condyle
Line A linear elevation, less prominent than a crest
Process Any bony prominence
Protuberance A projection of bone
Spine A projecting "spine like" part; sharp, slender and usually pointed
Trochanter A large, rough, irregularly shaped, blunt projection
Tuberocity A small, sometimes rough, rounded, blunt projection
Tubercle A small, smooth eminence
Projections formed where bones articulate with each other Capitulum A small round articular head
Condyle A smooth, rounded articular process
Facet A small, smooth, flat articular surface
Head The expanded articular surface of an epiphysis.
Malleolus A rounded process
Ramus An armlike bar of bone
Trochlea A spool like articular process, acts like a pulley
Depressions and grooves formed for the passage of vessels and nerves Fissure A narrow, slit-like opening
Foramen A round, sometimes oval opening through bone
Notch An indentation at the edge of a bone structure
Other bone markings Fossa A shallow depression in bone, sometimes serving as an articular surface
Meatus A canal-like passageway in bone
Sinus A mucous lined cavity in bone, filled with air

Bone Development

The process of bone formation is ossification; this is the formation on bone from other tissues. The major forms of ossification exist, endochondrial and intramembranous.

Endochondrial Ossification

Endochondrial bone formation is the ossification of existing cartilaginous structures. During development most bones begin as cartilage frames of the final bone. This cartilage is hardened during ossification and results in the boney structures observed in an adult. This process can be described through five generalised steps.

Intramembranous Ossification

Intramembranous bone formation is the formation of bone without a cartilage scaffold. This is the main process by which bone repair occurs, and is also used to form the bones of the face. This process can be summarised into the following.

Function

Bones have a variety of functions:

Mechanical
Synthetic
Metabolic


1.3 Introduction to Muscles

Topic:Anatomy | Back to Main Page

  1. Fernández, KS; de Alarcón, PA (2013 Dec). "Development of the hematopoietic system and disorders of hematopoiesis that present during infancy and early childhood.". Pediatric clinics of North America 60 (6): 1273–89. Template:DOI PMID 24237971.
  2. Lee, Na Kyung; et al. (10 August 2007). "Endocrine Regulation of Energy Metabolism by the Skeleton". Cell 130 (3): 456–469. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2007.05.047. PMID 17693256. PMC 2013746. http://download.cell.com/pdfs/0092-8674/PIIS0092867407007015.pdf. Retrieved 2008-03-15.
This article is issued from Wikiversity - version of the Sunday, July 19, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.