Intro Flashcards
What are the 5 components of the MSK system?
- Bones
- Muscles
- Joints = 2 bones meet
- Tendons = connect muscle and bone
- Ligaments = connect bone and bone
What are the 5 functions of the skeleton?
- Rigidity —> support
- Movement
- Protection
- Mineral storage —> homeostasis
- Blood cell production (bone marrow)
What is the structure of the skeleton?
206 bones + variable sesamoids (270 in children)
- Appendicular —> pectoral girdle, pelvic girdle, limbs
- Axial —> cranium, vertebral column, rib cage
What are the 2 components of bone?
- Cells - osteogenic, osteocyte, osteoblast, osteoclast
- ECM - osteoid (organic), minerals (inorganic)
What are the 4 types of bone cell and their functions?
- Osteogenic = bone stem cells
- Osteocyte = mature bone cells
- osteoblast embedded in osteoid
- direct osteoclasts/blasts depending on
mechanical strain - Osteoblast = bone forming cells
- secretes osteoid + catalyses
mineralisation - Osteoclasts = bone breaking cells
- dissolve and resorb bone via
phagocytosis
- from bone marrow
What is BMD?
Bone Mineral Density
- balance between osteoblast and osteoclast activity
- low BMD = osteoperosis (osteoclast > osteoblast)
What are the 4 drugs used to treat osteoperosis?
Inhibit osteoclast acitvity:
1. Bisphosphinates (eg. alendronate)
2. Denosumab - antibodies inhibiting RANKL
Stimulat osteoblast activity:
3. Teriparatide - recombinant parathyroid hormone
4. Romosozumab - antibodies inhibiting sclerostin
What are the 3 types of bone fracture?
- Trauma —> high/low energy
- Stress —> abnormal stress
- Pathological —> abnormal bone
What are the 5 types of bone diseases?
- Cancer - bone metastases
- myeloma
- primary (rare) - Osteoperosis - menopause, age, glucocorticoid
- Endocrine/metabolic - hyperparathyroidism
- osteomalacia (vit D deficient) - Paget’s disease - inc bone turnover
—> enlarge, fractures, deafness - Genetic - osteogenesis imperfecta
- sickle cell anaemia —> osteonecrosis
What is arthritis?
Disease of joints
How are joints classified? (6)
Structural:
1. Fibrous —> no space
- skull sutures, tibia/fibula syndesmosis
- synarthroses or amphiarthroses
2. Cartilaginous —> cartilage between
- vertebrae
- synarthroses or amphiarthroses
3. Synovial —> synovial fluid between
- knee, hip, shoulder
- diarthroses
Functional:
1. Synarthroses —> no movement
2. Amphitherosis —> limited movement
3. Diartheroses —> free movement
What are the 5 types of synovial joints?
- Hinge —> monoplanar
- knee - Ball and socket —> multiplanar
- shoulder, hip - Pivot joint —> limited rotation
- cervical spine - Condyloid —> all except pivotal
- wrist
What are the 3 components of synovial joints?
- Articular cartilage:
- Outer coverage
- Type 2 collagen, proteoglycan (aggrecan)
- Synovium:
- Lining —> 1-3 cell deep
- Synoviocytes —> Type A (phagocytic)
—> Type B (produce hyaluronic acid)
- Synovial fluid:
- Inner
- Hyaluronic acid-rich
What is the function of cartilage in the MSK system?
Smooth lining at joint —> minimise friction
What are the 4 types of arthritis?
Non-inflammatory:
1. Osteoarthritis - degenerative loss of cartilage
Inflammation-associated:
2. Autoimmune - rheumatoid
3. Crystal - gout —> urate crystals
- pseudogout —> CPPD crystals
4. Septic - joint bacterial infection