Joint Struture And Function Flashcards
Synarthrosis, Amphiarthrosis, & Diarthrosis
Synarthrosis- little to no movement
Amphiarthrosis- allows restrained motion
Diarthrosis- designed for movement
Ex: synovial joints are diarthrotic
Name the 7 elements a synovial joint always has
- Joint cavity filled with synovial fluid
- Articular cartilage covering the ends of bones
- Joint is enclosed by a joint capsule
- Inner layer is synovial membrane
- Outer layer is fibrous layer- reinforced by ligaments
- Capsule is supplied by blood vessels
- Capsule is supplied by sensory nerves for pain and proprioception
Glycosaminoglycans and water’s effect within the ground substance of a connective tissue in a joint
GAGs bond with and hold water which causes tissue to swell
Tissue will swell to the point where its pressurized, increases its ability to resist forces
If tissues aren’t properly hydrated and pressurized, they dont function well
Tendons and retinaculae
Tendons consist of collagen fibers arranged parallelly to pull strongly in one direction
Retinaculae are pulleys that restrain/strap tendons in place, near or across joints
Function: to prevent bow stringing! They maintain a near constant moment arm length throughout range of motion
Structural differences between tendons and ligaments
Tendons: collagen fibers arranged parallel to one another
Ligaments: arranged in different directions to resist force in several dominant directions
Structure of a joint capsule
No parallel or regular alignment of collagen- crisscrossed weave pattern
No uniform tension throughout range of motion of the joint because it allows for free movement
Fibers lengthen in the direction of the load
Articular cartilage
Most resilient, adaptive connective tissue
Forms load bearing surfaces of bones
Functions to reduce pressure at the joint surface and to reduce friction between joint surfaces during rotation
Immobilization
Immobilization is the enemy!
Depriving a joint of stress (movement) alters the bio mechanical properties of all the connective tissue in a synovial joint
Decline in mechanical properties happens much faster than the time it would take to regain mobility
Can cause contracture: temporary or permanent loss of mobility
Contact pressure vs contact force vs contact area
To decrease contact pressure, you have to decrease contact force or increase contact area
Ways to decrease contact force:
force = mass x acceleration
- Decreased body weight decreases the force
- Decreased muscle force requirements- activity modification, adaptive equipment, manipulation of external moment arm
- Increase shock absorption via special shoes/orthotics in the lower limbs
Ways to increase contact area:
- Reduce joint malalignment with a splint, brace, orthotics
- Know your limitations
- Might need surgical correction
- Activity movement modification (“avoid ____ and _____ which may further misalign your joints”)