Body Logistics Flashcards
What are the 4 valves of the heart? What do they seperate?
Tricuspid valve - between the right atrium and the right ventricle
Pulmonary valve - between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery
Mitral valve - between the left atrium and left ventricle
Aortic valve - between the left ventricle and the aortic arch
What are the 3 layers of walls of arteries and veins? and their composition?
Inner = tunica intima ( endothelium and elastic lamina) Middle = tunica media ( elastic lamina and connected by gap junctions) Outer = tunica externa ( connective tissue, lymph vessels and nerve fibres)
What are the 3 types of muscle
Smooth muscle
Cardiac muscle
Skeletal muscle
Properties of Skeletal muscle
- long parallel cylinders
- multiple peripheral nuclei
- fasicle bundles
- striated
Properties of Cardiac muscle
- striated
- centrally positioned nuclei
- intercalated discs
- branching
- T tubules on Z line
- junctions join cells end to end
Properties of Smooth muscle
- spindle shaped cells with central nucleus
- not striated, no T tubules, no sarcomeres
- connective tissue, gap and desmosome junctions
What are the 3 types of cartilage?
Hyaline cartilage
Fibrocartilage
Elastic cartilage
What is hyaline cartilage?
- matrix of proteoglycans, hylauronic acid and type 2 collagen
- in articulating surfaces (rib cage, nose, trachea..)
What is Fibrocartilage?
- chondrocytes and fibroblasts present
- dense regular CT and hyaline cartilage
- In intervertebral and articular discs and meniscus of knee
What is Elastic cartilage?
- Elastic fibres in extracellular matrix
- in external ear and epiglottis
- dark stained on H&E
Outline fracture repair
- Haematoma forms - swelling occurs, bone cells at fracture die and are removed.
- Fibrocartilagenous callus formation - procallus of granulation tissue forms, sleeve of hyaline cartilage forms, bone reconstructed to spongy bone
- Bony callus formation - trabecular bone forms, callus converted to cancellous bone, endochondral and intramembraneous ossification = cancellous bone
- Bone remodelling - cancellous bone remodelled to compact bone.
What is osteoporosis? The different types and the risk factors?
- metabolic bone disease
- mineralised bone decreases in mass and can no longer provide mechanical support
- Type 1 = postmenopausal women - increased osteoclast number due to oestrogen withdrawal
- Type 2= elderly - attenuated osteoblast function
- risk factors - genetic, insufficient calcium intake, exercise and smoking