Distinguish anatomically
between the axial and
appendicular skeleton
Axial skeleton: limit to the skull, ribs, sternum and
vertebral column consisting of cervical—7 bones;
thoracic—12 bones; lumbar—5 bones; sacral—5
bones (fused as 1); coccyx—4 bones (fused as 1).
Appendicular skeleton: limit to the pectoral girdle
(scapulae and clavicles), humerus, radius, ulna,
carpals, metacarpals, phalanges, pelvic girdle
(ilium, ischium and pubis), femur, patella, tibia,
fibula, tarsals, metatarsals and phalanges.
Distinguish between the
axial and appendicular
skeleton in terms of function
Consider the anatomical functions
appendicular attachment, movement an
axial protection support.
State the four types of bone
Limit to long, short, flat and irregular.
Draw and annotate the
structure of a long bone
Limit to:
* epiphysis
* spongy bone
* articular cartilage
* diaphysis
* compact bone
* bone marrow
* marrow cavity
* blood vessel
* periosteum.
Apply anatomical
terminology to the location
of bones.
Limit to:
* inferior
* superior
* proximal
* distal
* medial
* lateral
* posterior
* anterior.
Limit to the bones listed in the axial and
appendicular skeleton (see 1.1.1). Assume
anatomical position
Outline the functions of
connective tissue
cartilage - reduce friction
ligament - join bone to bone
tendon - join muscle to bone
Define the term joint.
A joint occurs where two or more bones articulate
Distinguish between the
different types of joint
in relation to movement
permitted.
fibrous none eg. skull
cartilaginous some
synovial freely moveable
Outline the features of a
synovial joint
List the different types of
synovial joint.
hinge,
ball and socket,
condyloid,
pivot,
gliding
and saddle.
Outline the general
characteristics common to
muscle tissue
Distinguish between the
different types of muscle
Skeletal
Include smooth, cardiac and skeletal
Under voluntary control, has a striated appearance, multi-nucleated fibres. Has tendons that attach mostly to bone. Main function of this type of muscle is to move the skeleton
Annotate the structure of
skeletal muscle
Muscle → Fascicle → Muscle Fibre → Myofibril → Sarcomere → Myofilaments (Actin and Myosin)
Define the terms origin and
insertion of muscles
Origin: the attachment of a muscle tendon to a
stationary bone.
Insertion: the attachment of a muscle tendon to a
moveable bone
Identify the location of
skeletal muscles in various
regions of the body
Include the muscles from:
* the anterior
– deltoid
– pectoralis
– iliopsoas
– sartorius
– quadriceps
– femoris (rectus femoris, vastus
intermedialis, vastus medialis, vastus
lateralis)
– tibialis anterior
– abdominus rectus
– external obliques
– biceps brachii
* the posterior
– trapezius
– triceps brachii
– latissimus dorsi
– gluteus maximus
– hamstrings (biceps femoris,
semitendinosus, semimembranosus)
– gastrocnemius
– soleus
– erector spinae.