Joints Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 3 main types of joints

A

fibrous
cartilaginous
synovial joints

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2
Q

what do joints divide into

A
solid joints (fibrous and cartilaginous)
cavitated joints (synovial joints)
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3
Q

what is the largest category of joints

A
  • Cavitated joints such as synovial joints are the largest category of joints as these give movement
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4
Q

list some fibrous joints

A
  • frontal coronal sutures - sutures are junctions that are completely filled by a minimal amount of fibrous tissue
    syndesmosis - a band of fibrous tissue between the ulna and radius that stops the bones from separating
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5
Q

name the cartilaginous joints

A
  • you have primary cartilaginous joints called SYNCHONDROSIS,this is united by hyaline cartilage and allows growth for example epiphyseal growth plate, when this closes up during adulthood growth stops
  • secondary cartilaginous called SYMPHYSIS- this is in the vertebrae in between the intervertebral discs, united by fibrocartilage, these are good shock absorbers
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6
Q

Name the 6 types of synovial joints

A
  1. ball and socket
  2. hinge
  3. plane
  4. saddle
  5. condyloid
  6. pivot
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7
Q

describe a synovial joint

A
  • synovial joints are united by a joint articular capsule = fibrous capsule and synovial membrane
  • bones surface is covered by articular cartilage which is the shock absorber and protection
  • joint cavity contains synovial fluid and is produced by a synovial membrane
  • ligaments joint bone to bone
  • provide a lot of movement
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8
Q

what is a joint

A

a joint is an union or junction between two or more bones

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9
Q

describe fibrous joints

A
  • articulating bones are joined together by fibrous tissue

- amount of movement is dependent on the length of fibre

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10
Q

ball and sockets

A
  • mutiaxial movement - allow movement in multiple axes and plane
  • flexion, extension, abduction and adduction medial and lateral, rotation and circumduction
  • shoulder and hip joints
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11
Q

hinge joint

A
  • uniaxial joint - allows movement in one direction only
  • allows flexion and extension
  • knee and elbow
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12
Q

pivot joints

A
  • rotation around a central axis
  • uniaxial
  • C1-C2 alantoaxial joint in the neck
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13
Q

plane joint

A
  • multiaxial
  • flat surface
  • permit gliding and sliding movements
  • movements are prohibited by joint capsule
  • acrominoclavicular and intercarpal are examples
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14
Q

condyloid joints

A
  • oval shaped end of one bone fitting into a similarly oval-shaped hollow of another bone
  • bilaxial - flexion, extension, abduction and adduction
  • movement in one plane is greater than in the other
  • circumduction is possible but is restricted
  • metacarpophalangeal joints
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15
Q

saddle joints

A
  • represents a saddle
  • concave and convex portions
  • abduction and adduction
  • flexion and extension
  • biaxial
  • carpometacarapl joint which is between carpal bone (scaphoid) and metacarpal bone of the thumb
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16
Q

is there a small amount of movement allowed at the cartilaginous joint

A

yes