Aug 14 lecture

Beschreibung

Regional anatomy
Christianna Ziccardi
Karteikarten von Christianna Ziccardi, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Christianna Ziccardi
Erstellt von Christianna Ziccardi vor mehr als 7 Jahre
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Zusammenfassung der Ressource

Frage Antworten
Gross Anatomy Study of structures visible to the unaided eye
Topographical anatomy Anatomy of one part of the body in relation to another
Applied Anatomy applied to disease
Microscopic anatomy study of tissue with a microscope
Ultra Structural Anatomy study of tissues with electron microscope
What type of plane? Median
What is a sagittal plane? Any plane parallel to the median plane
What type of plane? Dorsal plane (any level that is perpendicular to the median plane
What type of plane? Transverse plane
Cranial vs Caudal Closer to head=cranial Closer to tail=caudal Can also be used to directly compare parts (ie the forelimb cranial to the hind limb)
Where is rostral vs caudal used? The head region
Rostral vs caudal Rostral= toward the nose (nostral) Caudal= toward the tail
Dorsal vs ventral Dorsal=closer to top Ventral=closer to bottom (think V)
Axial vs Abaxial Axial= Facing or towards the central line or axis Abaxial= facing away or farther from the central line or axis
Medial vs Lateral Medial- closer to median plane Lateral- farther away from median plane
Proximal vs distal Proximal- closer to the trunk (body) Distal- farther from the trunk
Which three terms are used distal to the carpal bones? Dorsal and Palmar/Plantar
Dorsal and Palmar and Plantar Dorsal- top Palmar- bottom (palm) forelimb Plantar- bottom (palm) hindlimb
Superficial vs deep Superficial- near the surface of the body deep- near the center (inside the trunk) of the body
5 general functions of bones 1) Provide form and support 2) Protect soft tissues (i.e lungs) 3) act as levers to facilitate locomotion 4) have a role in blood cell formation 5) maintain mineral homeostasis
Two classes of skeleton and what they include Axial skeleton- forms and supports the body trunk Appendicular skeleton- forms the limbs
7 classes of bones 1) Long bones 2) Irregular bones 3) Short bones 4) flat bones 5) sesamoid (round) bones 6) pneumatic bones 7) Heterotropic or splanchnic bones
What class of bone? Long
What class of bone? Irregular
What class of bone? Short
What class of bone? Flat
Form and function of sesamoid (round) bones small, nodular, embedded within tendons and adjacent to joints where the tendons are compressed
Pneumatic bones air filled bones
Heterotrophic or splanchnic bones (3 types) -os penis (dog) -os cordis (cattle) os rostrum (pigs)
#2? What is it composed of? Diaphysis, composed of compact bone
What structure is the diaphysis covered by? periosteum
#1? Composed of what? Epiphysis, made up of spongy bone covered by compact bone
#3/#4 Articular cartilage (AKA hyaline cartilage)
#5, function? Epiphyseal line, thin strip of bone marking the fusion of epiphysis to diaphysis
What is the difference between epiphyscal growth plate and the epiphyseal line Area actively growing in bones is called epiphyscal growth plate. It is replaced by the epiphyseal line when the bone stops growing
#6 Spongy bone
#7? Medullary cavity
Where is metaphysis on a long bone and what is it made of? Metaphysis is part of the diaphysis that borders the epiphyseal plate/line and consists of spongy bone
Blue? Articular cartilage (hyaline cartilage)
Light purple (top) Epiphyseal plate or line
Orangish pink? Medullary cavity/spongy bone
Green (outer covering) Periosteum
Yellow? (middle) Diaphysis (compact bone)
Dark purple (inner) Endosteum
Almost mature animals have an open or closed growth plate? Closed
number and locations of ossification centers in long bones (3), one diaphyseal center (middle of the bone) and two epiphyseal centers (top and bottom)
Number of ossification centers in a short bone one
Which two bone classifications have variable numbers of ossification centers? Flat and irregular
Where does the nutrient artery attach? in the middle of the diaphysis
What is the nutrient foramen? A gap in the bone that allows arteries through
Three properties of muscles that allow them to produce movement 1) Contractility 2) Excitability 3) Extensibility
Why do muscles differ in shape? Based on the amount of work they do (shortening depends on fiber length, power depends on cross sectional area)
Two ways muscles attach to bones and their characteristics Tendons- discrete band of tissue Aponeurosis- flat, wide, thin sheet of fiberous connective tissue
2 Different muscle attachments and their characteristics Origin- more fixed (least movable), usually proximal attachment Insertion- more movable, usually distal attachment
Muscle belly fleshy contractile part of muscle
Retinaculum Band of dense regular tissue than binds down muscle tendons as they pass over bone surfaces
When is the retinaculum generally broad? When it passes over many tendons (ex dorsal aspect of carpus)
Function of synovial bursa? Permits frictionless movement of a tendon over bone
Differences between synovial bursa and tendon sheath? Same function, tendon sheath (4) normally lays under a retinaculum (3) and wraps completely around the tendon (1)
How does the synovial sheath relate to the tendon sheath The synovial sheath is one of two layers that surrounds a tendon sheath
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