Cartilage % Bone Flashcards
What are the three types of cartilage?
Hyaline
Elastic
Fibro
All of which are connective tissues
Describe Hyaline cartilage?
Most abundant form of cartilage found in the body, it is white and bluish in colour. Covers opposing bone surfaces with joints acting as a shock absorber. Also found connecting ribs to sternum and supporting respiratory tract
Describe Elastic Cartilage?
Very resilient and flexible form of cartilage. Found in epiglottis and flap of ear. Helps to maintain shape of structures.
Describe Fibro Cartilage?
Strongest type of cartilage. High in collagen fibres and chondrocytes. Found between vertebrae discs. It supports and joins structures.
What are the functions of bone?
Support for soft tissue protection - ribs/skull/vertebrae Storage - calcium Blood cell production in red bone marrow Movement-attached to muscles
What are the four types of bone?
Long - femur
Short - various wrist bones
Flat - cranial, ribs
Irregular -vertebrae
Describe the anatomy of a long bone top to bottom
Articular caritalege on bone end
Proximal epiphysis which contains red bone marrow (spongy bone)
Epiphyseal line
Metaphysis
Diaphysis - exterior is made of compact bone and interior has the medullary cavity where yellow cartilage is found
What are the four main types of cell found in bone tissue?
Osteoprogenitor
Osteoblasts
Osteocytes
Osteoclasts
What are Osteoprogenitor cells?
The only bone cells that undergo cell division which creates osteoblasts
What are Osteoblasts?
Bone building cells. Forms bone extracellular matrix and secretes collagen fibres.
What are Osteocytes?
Mature bone cells that maintain bone tissue
What are Osteoclasts?
Huge cells, involved in destroying bone extracellular matrix.
What is the makeup of bone extracellular matrix?
25% water, 25% collagen fibres, 50% crystallised mineral salts
What glands are responsible for balancing blood calcium levels?
Throid and Parathyroid glands
How do the thyroid and parathyroid glands balance blood calcium levels?
If levels are high, thyroid gland releases calcitonin which inhibits osteoblasts lowering blood calcium
If levels are low, parathyroid gland releases parathyroid hormone, stimulating osteoclasts and raising blood calcium