Joints: form and function Flashcards
What are synarthroses?
Fibrous/semi-rigid joints
- fibrous = ligamentous (sutures of the skull, syndesmous equine metacarpals, gomphosis (peridontal ligaments))
- cartilaginous = cartilage (synchondroses at growth plate, symphyses - mandible and pelvis midline between vertebral bodies)
What are diarthroses?
Freely movable
- synovial (fluid filled cavity, shoulder, stifle, hip, etc)
What are psuedarthroses?
False joint
- unhealed area of a bone has motion like a joint
What is a suture?
site of growth - membrane between bone grows, bone grows into membrane at suture
What are syndesmoses and gomphosis?
Bands of short ligaments
e. g. syndesmoses = equine metacarpals
e. g. gomphosis = peridontal ligament
What is a synchondrosis?
Cartilaginous joint between the epiphysis and diphysis
Where are symphasis located?
Mandibular
- some sp. mobility for mastication
- common site of fracture in cats
Pelvic
- becomes softer before parturition (relaxin)
Invertebral disc
- movement facilitated by ligament like fibrocartilage
What is the general layout of a diarthroses?
Synovial joint - overall have a degree of joint congruity
- two bones ends are the epiphysis covered with the hyaline cartilage
- joint fluid is between the two
- surrounded by the synovial membrane
Describe a hinge joint
Hinge - shaped to limit articulation to one plane e.g. the knee
Describe a ball and socket joint?
Wide, almost infinite range of articulation e.g. the hip
Describe the sternoclavicular joint
Starting with the clavicle and moving down to the acromion you move to the glenoid cavity which is caudal to the acromion
Then move to the coracoid process which attaches the scapula to the clavicle
What is the synovium made up of?
Synovium = initmal layer + sub-intima
- sub-intima = loose fibrous/fatty/dense fibrous tissue
- no basement membrane
- initimal lining 100µm, 2-3 cells thick
What cells are in the synovium?
Type (A) cells - macrophage like - phagocytosis
Type (B) cells - fibroblast like - produce synovial fluid
- produces plasma ultrafiltrate < 10KDa molecules get into synovial fluid from the blood
What molecules act as a lubricant for the synovial fluid?
Water Hyaluronic acid Lubricin Surface active phospholipids Few mononuclear leukocytes Glucose/electrolytes at plasma concentrations/bathes cartilage
What is lubricin?
Protection through lubrication - low friction: HA-lubricin complexes Mechanically - controlled lubrication - compression drives HA from cartilage - trapped in surface collagen network - HA-lubricin complex - bound network