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Support Protection Movement Mineral storage Blood cell formation (hemopoiesis) Triglyceride storage.

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Presentation on theme: "Support Protection Movement Mineral storage Blood cell formation (hemopoiesis) Triglyceride storage."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Support Protection Movement Mineral storage Blood cell formation (hemopoiesis) Triglyceride storage

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4 Distal epiphysis Proximal epiphysis diaphysis yellow marrow epiphyseal line periosteum compact bone spongy bone Endosteum hyaline cartilage Sharpey’s fibers

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6 periosteum Haversian system spongy bone Lamellae osteocyte Lamellae

7 osteocytes in lacunae central canal

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10 275 bones 12 weeks (6-9 inches long)

11 Fig. 06.13

12 cartilage calcified cartilage bone epiphyseal plate epiphyseal line Endochondral Ossification 2 o ossification center Fetus: 1 st 2 months AdultChildhood Just before birth 1 o ossification center

13 Fig. 06.08

14 GH from anterior pituitary, which is regulated by T3 and T4 of the thyroid During puberty- sex hormones: estrogen and testosterone

15 Hyposecretion of GH- dwarfism Hypersecretion of GH- gigantism Sultan Kosen (R) 8 ft 1 in He Pingping 2 ft 5.37 in

16 Parathyroid hormone- stimulates osteoclasts Calcitonin- inhibits osteoclasts Parathyroid hormone- stimulates osteoclasts Calcitonin- inhibits osteoclasts Maintains homeostasis

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18 Osteoblast Osteocyte Osteoclast Eats bone Builds new bone Mature bone cell

19 hematoma callus bony callus bone remodeling

20 Usually treated by realignment Simple- closed fracture (8-12 wks to heal) bone breaks cleanly; no penetration Compound- bone penetrates through skin Comminuted- bone fragments into many pieces; aged or brittle bones Compression- bone is crushed Depressed- broken bone portion is depressed inward Impacted- broken bone ends are forced into each other Spiral- excessive twisting of bone Greenstick- bone breaks incompletely

21 ObliqueComminutedSpiralCompound

22 1.Electrical stimulation of the fracture site: Increases speed and completeness of healing The e- stimulation inhibits PTH and slow osteoclasts down from reabsorbing bone 2. Ultrasound treatment: Daily treatments reduce healing time of broken bones by 25-35% 3. Free vascular fibular graft technique: Transplant fibula in arm Gives good blood supply not available in other treatments 4. Bone substitutes: Crushed bone from cadaver- but risk of HIV and hepatitis Sea bone- coral Artificial bone- ceramic

23 Osteoporosis- bone reabsorption outpaces bone deposit; bones become lighter and fracture easier Factors: age, gender (more in women) estrogen and testosterone decrease insufficient exercise (or too much) diet poor in Ca ++ and protein abnormal vitamin D receptors smoking

24 29 40 84 92

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26 Rickets- vitamin D deficiency Osteomalacia- soft bones, inadequate mineralization in bones, lack of vitamin D

27 Rheumatoid arthritis- autoimmune reaction

28 1.What does the secondary site of ossification produce? 2.What is an epiphyseal line? 3.Provide an example of a flat bone? 4.How does PTH effect bone development? 5.How many bones in the adult skeleton? 6.What does an osteoblast do and where are they primarily found? INQUIRY


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