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Skeletal System & Skeletal Joints. Function of the Skeletal System 1.Enables you to move. 2.It provides shape and support. 3.Protects your organs. 4.Produces.

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Presentation on theme: "Skeletal System & Skeletal Joints. Function of the Skeletal System 1.Enables you to move. 2.It provides shape and support. 3.Protects your organs. 4.Produces."— Presentation transcript:

1 Skeletal System & Skeletal Joints

2 Function of the Skeletal System 1.Enables you to move. 2.It provides shape and support. 3.Protects your organs. 4.Produces blood cells. 5.Stores minerals and other materials until your body needs them.

3 Bones, Bones and More Bones

4  The bone is surrounded by a tough layer of connective tissue called the periosteum (pehr-ee-AHS-tee-um).  Blood vessels that pass through the periosteum carry oxygen and nutrients to the bone.

5 What makes up a bone?  Beneath the bone’s outer membrane is a layer of compact bone, which is hard and dense, but not solid.  Small canals run through the compact bone. These canals carry blood vessels and nerves from the bone’s surface to the living cells within the bone.

6 What makes up a bone?  Just inside the compact bone is a layer of spongy bone. Like a sponge, spongy bone has many small spaces within it.  This structure makes spongy bone tissue lightweight but strong. Spongy bone is also found at the ends of the bone.

7 What makes up a bone?  The spaces in many bones contain a soft, connective tissue called marrow.  There are two types of marrow—red and yellow.

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9 What makes up a bone?  Red bone marrow produces some of the body’s blood cells.  Some bones contain yellow marrow. This marrow stores fat that can serve as an energy reserve.

10 How do Bones Change  The skeleton of an embryo is composed almost entirely of a type of connective tissue called cartilage.

11 Development of Bones  Cartilage is replaced by bone during the process of bone formation called ossification.  Ossification begins to take place up to seven months before birth.

12 Bone Growth…  A baby is born with a temporary skeleton of mostly soft cartilage.  They have a total of about 350 bones.  Bones gradually harden as a child grows. The calcium phosphate needed comes from milk.  Bones grow outward from the center.

13  BrainPOP | Health | Learn about Skeleton BrainPOP | Health | Learn about Skeleton BrainPOP | Health | Learn about Skeleton

14 Skeletal System  Types of Skeletal Joints

15 Types of Joints  A place where one bone attaches to another bone is called a Skeletal Joint

16 Types of Skeletal Joints  Immoveable Joints include the cranium and the pelvic girdle.  Immoveable joints are bones that are fused together and will never move

17 Ball and Socket Joint ● Allow the greatest range of motion ● Allow the greatest range of motion ●The hips and shoulders contain ball-and-socket joints ●The hips and shoulders contain ball-and-socket joints ● This allows you to swing your arms and legs in a circle

18 Moveable Joints Hinge Joint  Like a hinge on a door, a hinge joint allows extensive forward and backward motion  Elbows, knees and fingers also have these types of joints. fingers

19 Hinge Joints

20 Pivot Joint  Allows only rotary movement  The pivot joint in the top of your neck gives you limited ability to turn your head from side to side

21 Pivot Joints

22 Gliding Joint  Allows one bone to slide over another  Examples can be found on your wrist and your ankles.

23 Gliding Joint

24 Which Joints are being used? Do the following activities with me: –MOVE YOUR ARM IN A CIRCLE –PUSH OPEN A DOOR –LIFT A BOOK FROM A DESK –KNEEL DOWN –WAVE YOUR HAND –TWIST YOUR HEAD FROM SIDE TO SIDE

25 How do the bones Stay together?  Ligaments : The function of ligaments is to connect bone to bone. Ligaments provide stability in the joints by preventing too much movement.  Tendons: The function of tendons is to connect muscle to bone. Tendons carry the force from the muscle that moves the bone  Cartilage: Cartilage is used to cushion the junction of two bones.

26 Skeletal System Disorders  Excessive strain on a joint may produce inflammation, a response in which excess fluid causes swelling, pain, heat, and redness. Inflammation of a bursa is called bursitis.  A more serious disorder is arthritis, which involves inflammation of the joint itself. Arthritis affects approximately 10 percent of the world's population.

27 Skeletal System Disorders  In older people, especially women, loss of calcium can lead to a weakening of the bones, a condition known as osteoporosis.  Osteoporosis can cause many serious fractures.  BrainPOP | Health | Learn about Joints BrainPOP | Health | Learn about Joints BrainPOP | Health | Learn about Joints


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