List the functions of the skeleton.
What mineral salts and fat are stored in the bones of the skeleton?
Eg. Prego woman’s diet does not contain enough calcium, it can be removed from her skeleton and used for the growth of bones in the developing foetus.
What does a Long Bone consist of?
Explain the structure of the Diaphysis.
* This cavity is used as a fat storage site and is often cells the Yellow Bone Marrow cavity.
Explain the structure of the Epiphyses.
They have a compact bone on the outside but their central regions contain spongy or cancellous bone.
What is a Cancellous bone?
It is more porous than a compact bone, and contains many large spaces filled with marrow. In certain bones this may be red bone marrow, where blood cell production takes place.
What is located on the outer surface if the bone?
There is a dense, white, fibrous covering, the periosteum.
There is no periosteum at the joints where the bone is covered with an articular cartilage.
What are bones classified as?
Connective tissues.
What do Connective Tissues consist of ?
Cells separated from each other by large amounts of non-cellular material called matrix.
Why are inorganic salts deposited in the matrix?
These increase it’s rigidity and strength and make it the hardest of the connective tissues.
What does a compact bone consist of?
Many similar units called Osteons or Haversian systems.
Explain the structure of the Oesteons or Harversian systems.
At the centre of each Oesteon is a central canal (Haversian canal), around which are concentric layers of bony matrix called lamellae.
How are material passed from cell to cell?
Projections from the bone cells enter the canaliculi and make contact with adjacent bone cells. In this way materials can be passed from cell to cell.
What does the central canal (located in the middles of each Osteon) contain?
At least one blood capillary. It may also contain nerves and lymph capillaries.
What gives the osteons maximum strength?
The fact that they run parallel to the long axis of the bone.
What are Spongy bone?
AKA Cancellous Bone
When does bone grow?
Bone grows as an individual passes through infancy and adolescence to adulthood.
In an adult, the bones of the skeletal system are capable of repair and continue their functions if blood cell formation and storage.
What is a Cartilage?
Like bone, it is a connective tissue.
It contains numerous fibres made of a protein called collagen.
What is a Chondrin?
It is where the Collagen/ protein fibres are embedded in; It is a firm matrix of protein-carbohydrate complex.
Explain the structure of the Chondrin.
This form matrix enables cartilage to function as a structural support, while the preserve of fibres gives cartilage a certain amount of flexibility.
Because of these properties it is found on the surface if the bones at the joints and in the trachea and bronchi, and forms the nose, larynx and outer ear.
What are Chondroblasts?
->Once this has occurred, the cells are considered to be mature and are referred to as chondrocytes.
Why do Collagen fibres have to be classified?
Because the collagen fibres in the matrix range in thickness from extremely fine, so that they can just be seen with a microscope, to quite coarse.
The variation in the fibrous structure of the cartilage is used to classify it into 3 types:
Explain the structure of the Hyaline Cartilage.