skeletal system axial skeleton

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Anatomy Chapter 7 Skeletal System Axial Skeleton

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Skeletal System Axial Skeleton. Anatomy Chapter 7. Axial skeleton. axis- center consists of the center bones of the body 80 bones 3 major regions: skull vertebral column thoracic cage. Skull. most complex structure mostly flat bones has about 85 named openings - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Skeletal System Axial Skeleton

AnatomyChapter 7

Skeletal SystemAxial Skeleton

Page 2: Skeletal System Axial Skeleton

axis- centerconsists of the center bones of the body80 bones

3 major regions:skullvertebral columnthoracic cage

Axial skeleton

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most complex structuremostly flat boneshas about 85 named openings22 bones, usu interlocked along suture lines

8 cranium bones14 facial bones

Skull

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helmetencloses and protects the brain, provides areas for muscle attachment for head movements and chewing

held together by sutures- immovable joints

Cranium

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8 bones

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1. frontal- forehead2. parietal- largest part (2)3. occipital-

external occipital protuberanceforamen magnumoccipital condyles

4. temporal (2)- Latin- temporum- time passing

external auditory meatusmastoid processstyloid process- (stake-like)zygomatic process

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Frontal Occipital

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Temporal

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5. sphenoid- (spheno-wedge)helps form base of cranium, sides of skull, floors and sides of orbits; keystone

sella turcica- Turk’s saddle6. ethmoid bone- forms most of bony area of nasal cavity & eye orbits

cribiform platescrista galli- cock’s comb

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Sphenoid

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Facial bones14 bones- 13

immovable; 1 movable

Fxn: form basic shape of face, provide attachment for muscles, contain cavities for special sense organs, provide openings for air & food, & secure teeth

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1. Maxillaekeystone bone of the face

form upper jaw, roof of mouth, floors of orbits and nasal cavity

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Cleft palate

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2. Zygomatic bonesform cheekbones

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3. Mandiblehorseshoe shaped body

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Sinusesfxn:

warm and humidify air

lighten skullenhance

resonance of voice

sinus infections

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Fontanelsaka soft spotallows for movement through birth canal

close up by 2 years of age

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Vertebral Column~ 28” long in adults

26 irregular bones adults

infants 33 bones

separated by intervertebral discs

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Cervical VertebraeC1 – atlas

nod yes; up and down m’ment

C2- axisshake no; side to side m’ment

7 vertebrae

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Thoracic VertebraeLarger than cervical

Articulate with ribs

12 vertebrae

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Lumbar Vertebraebiggest vertebrae

bears most of body’s weight

small of back5 vertebrae

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Sacrum and Coccyxsacrum- 5 fused vertebrae

form base of column

coccyx- lowest part of column

4 fused bones

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Thoracic Cageincludes ribs,

thoracic vetebrae, sternum, costal cartilages

fxn: support pectoral girdle, protect viscera, aid in breathing

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12 pairs (usually) join to a thoracic vertebra1st 7 ribs are TRUE RIBS- join sternum directly by their costal cartilages

next 5 pairs are FALSE RIBS- cartilage doesn’t reach sternum diriectly

next 2 (3) pairs are FLOATING RIBS- no cartilaginous attachment to sternum

Ribs

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usu break at greatest curvature

middle ribs commonly fractured

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Sternumaka breastbone~ 6” longxyphoid process doesn’t completely ossify until about 40 years old

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Hyoid BoneOnly bone in body that doesn’t articulate w/ other bones

Enables us to talk

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process of bone developingbones form by replacing existing connective tissue in either of 2 ways:

1. intramembranous ossification- formation of bone directly on or within fibrous membranes

Ossification

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simplest, most direct type of bone development

osteoblasts form bone tissueskull & clavicles formed this way

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replacement of hyaline cartilage shapes by bone tissue

endo= within chondro= cartilage

2. endochondral ossification

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growth takes place at the epiphyseal plates on the long bones

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most bones of body form this waymore complex methodby age 25 all bones are ossifiedclavicle- last bone to stop growing

bone REMODELING occurs continuously thru-out life