Anatomy Flashcards
What it the pubic area called ?
Perineum or pelvis
What is supination and pronation ?
Skull called ?
Cranium
Shoulder blades ?
Scapula
Collar bones ?
Clavicle
Radius is in line with your thumb
Hyaline cartilage ?
Hyaline cartilage
Hyaline cartilage is the most common type of cartilage in your body. It lines your joints and caps the ends of your bones. Hyaline cartilage at the ends of your bones is sometimes referred to as articular cartilage.
Hyaline cartilage is slippery and smooth which helps your bones move smoothly past each other in your joints. It’s flexible but strong enough to help your joints hold their shape.
Hyaline cartilage locations in your body include:
At the ends of bones that form joints.
Between your ribs.
In your nasal passages.
Fibrocartilage ?
Fibrocartilage
Fibrocartilage is what its name sounds like: tough cartilage made of thick fibers. It’s the strongest and least flexible of the three types. It’s tough enough to hold parts of your body in place and absorb impacts.
Fibrocartilage locations in your body include:
The meniscus in your knee.
In disks between the vertebrae in your spine.
Supporting muscles, tendons and ligaments throughout your body.
Elastic cartilage ?
Elastic cartilage is your most flexible cartilage. It supports parts of your body that need to bend and move to function. Elastic cartilage can bounce back to its original shape, even after a strong force. Your ear is made of elastic cartilage. It can bend and move without hurting you before returning to its usual shape.
Elastic cartilage locations in your body include:
Your external ears (the parts of your ear that are outside your body).
Your Eustachian tubes (the tube that carries sounds from your external ear into your head).
Your larynx (your voice box).
Epiglottis - The flap that covers the trachea during swallowing so that food does not enter the lungs
Ligament
Attaches bone to bone
Tendon ?
Muscle to bone
What is the lymphatic system ?
Returns fluid to blood.
Defends against pathogens
What is the urinary system ?
Controls water balance in the body.
Removes waste from blood and excretes them.
What is connective tissue ?
Connective tissue fills the spaces between organs and tissues, and provides them with structural and metabolic support. It is made up of cells embedded with fibres in an extracellular matrix of protein and polysaccharides that is secreted and organised by the cells. Variations in the composition of the extracellular matrix, determines the properties of the connective tissue. For example, if the matrix is calcified, it can form bone or teeth. Specialised forms of extracellular matrix also make up tendons, cartilage, and the cornea of the eye
What is the skeleton made up of ?
he skeleton consists of specialised forms of connective tissue – cartilage and bone – which enable its many functions including support, protection, movement, haematopoiesis and mineral storage.
What is cartilage ?
Cartilage is an avascular and aneural connective tissue that contains varying quantities of collagen and elastin fibres depending on type and function. Its smooth surface makes it ideal for articular surfaces in joints, and its rigidity enables it to support the patency of tubes in the body (e.g. trachea)
Give examples of 3 types of cartilage ?
Hyaline - Coats the ends of bones in synovial joints providing smooth, gliding surface. Also found along the airway.
Elastic - Supports soft tissues such as in the external ear and epiglottis.
Fibrocartilage - Tough due to substantial amount of collagen and supports heavy weight-bearing areas including menisci, intervertebral discs and pubic symphysis
Describe the knee joint ?
The femur at the top.
Tibia and fibula at the bottom.
Tibia is more inner and fibula is more outer.
There is hyaline cartilage between the two bones. This is sometimes called articular cartilage. The joint is sometimes called articular joint.
The meniscus is a C-shaped piece of tough, rubbery cartilage that acts as a shock absorber between the shinbone and the thighbone. It can be torn if you suddenly twist your knee while bearing weight on it.
The knee is a synovial joint.
The patella is the largest sesamoid bone in the human body and is located anterior to knee joint.
A bursa is a closed, fluid-filled sac that works as a cushion and gliding surface to reduce friction between tissues of the body
Quadriceps femoris:Your quad muscles, or quadriceps femoris, are a group of muscles at the front of your thigh. Together, they contain more mass than any other muscle group in your body. You use your quads to perform a variety of movements, including kicking, running, jumping and walking
Name the 4 basic tissue types ?
Nervous
Muscle
Epithelial
Connective
There are 3 main types of connective tissue ?
- Connective tissue proper
- Specialised connective tissue
- Embryonic connective tissue
What are the two types of connective tissue proper ?
Loose
Dense
Describe loose connective tissue? (connective tissue proper)
Where is loose connective tissue proper found ?
Less cells and fibers. Collagen is the most predominant fiber with moderate amounts of elastin. Sparse arrangement.
More ground substance
Found under skin and around organs
Describe dense connective tissue? (Connective tissue proper)
More cells and fibers
Less ground substance
What are the 3 types of dense connective tissue ?
Dense regular connective tissue:
Fibers are arranged in parallel for a unidirectional resistance to stress.
Typically found in tendons and ligaments
Dense irregular connective tissue
Irregular pattern of collagen and elastin means it can sustain tension under many different directions. Forms a 3D meshwork.
Typically found surrounding organs and joints.
Dense elastic connective tissue
Elastic fibers which are tightly packed which allow for stretch and recoil
This is found in the aorta.
Give 4 examples of specialized connective tissue:
Adipose
Blood
Cartilage
Bone
Describe adipose tissue ?
Made up of adipocytes that are filled with lipid droplets
There is only a small amount of ECM and very few collagen fibers keeping the cells together.
White adipose tissue and brown adipose tissue
Describe white adipose tissue ?
White adipose tissue: found in adults and is energy storing, protective ( cushions internal organs) and secretory. Distributed as parietal: Found embedded in the connective tissue proper, found primarily in the abdomen, thighs, hips and back.
Visceral : surrounds and supports the bodys organs
Describe brown adipose tissue ?
Brown adipose tissue: found in babies and is thermogenic ( heat production)
Describe blood ?
Made up of red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets and plasma.
Function: acts to transport gases, nutrients, waste and macromolecules.
Describe bone ?
Calcified ECM ( extracellular matrix) is responsible for its hard nature.
The cells are trapped within the calcifies bone matric
Osteon with concentric rings surrounding central canals.
Describe cartilage ?
Is avascular ( no blood vessels) as a result nutrients must diffuse across the ECM.
Chondrocytes are the cells found within cartilage ECM, they secrete small amounts of ECM to preserve structural integrity.
Chondrocytes produce cartiallage
What are the 3 types of cartilage ?
Hylaine cartilage
Elastic cartilage
fibrocartilage.