Joints and Articulations Flashcards

1
Q

Fibrous joints

A

Bones held together by fibrous tissue with no joint cavity

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2
Q

Sutures

A

Non-mobile (fibrous) joints found in the skull

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3
Q

Syndesmoses

A

Fibrous joint in which bones are connected by ligaments; e.g. distal end of tibia and fibula

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4
Q

Gomphoses

A

Joint of the tooth and its socket

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5
Q

Cartilaginous joints

A

Bones joined together by a cartilaginous plate

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6
Q

Synchondroses

A

Bones jointed by a cartilaginous plate. Provides sources of growth in youth (usually ossified after puberty). e.g. joint between first rib and manubrium, epiphyseal plate of long bones

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7
Q

Symphyses

A

Pad between bones composed of fibrocartilage sandwiched between hyaline cartilage. Allows movement and acts as shock absorber. e.g. intervertebral joints and pubic symphysis

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8
Q

Synovial joints

A

Articulating bones separated by fluid filled joint cavity

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9
Q

General structure of synovial joints

A

1) Articular cartilage
2) Joint cavity and articular capsule
3) Synovial membrane
4) Synovial fluid
5) Reinforcing ligaments: intrinsic (part of fibrous capsule), extracapsular (found outside capsule), and intracapsular (just deep to capsule)

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10
Q

Bursae

A

Flattened sacs containing synovial fluid. Common where bones, tendons and/or ligaments rub together

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11
Q

False bursae

A

Develop at sites of excessive motion (typically within soft tissue)

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12
Q

Bursitis

A

Inflammation of a bursa. Could be due to overuse, injury, infection, continual microtrauma, etc

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13
Q

Tendon sheaths

A

Elongated bursae that wraps around a tendon subjected to friction

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14
Q

Factors that influence synovial joint stability

A

1) Articular surface: most determine range of motion rather than stability. e.g. deep ball and socket (such as hip joint) provides much stability
2) Ligaments: function to direct bone movement and prevent excessive range
3) Muscle tone: tendons crossing joint are important in stabilizing the joint; important in shoulder and knee joints

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