ARTICULATIONS Joints between bones Hold bones firmly to each other Permit movement Classified by...

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ARTICULATIONS • Joints between bones • Hold bones firmly to each other • Permit movement • Classified by degree of movement (range of motion) and type of substance between bones

Transcript of ARTICULATIONS Joints between bones Hold bones firmly to each other Permit movement Classified by...

ARTICULATIONS

• Joints between bones• Hold bones firmly to each other• Permit movement• Classified by degree of movement

(range of motion) and type of substance between bones

1. SYNARTHROSES

• Immovable• Bound together by dense, fibrous connective

tissue (ligaments) or bony fusions• 4 types:

– Sutures (fibrous)– Gomphoses - tooth root + alveolar processes of

mandible or maxillae (fibrous)– Synostosis – bony fusion – epiphyseal line, metopic

sutures– Synchondroses (joint between ribs and sternum;

epiphyseal plate) (hyaline cartilage)

2. AMPHIARTHROSES

• Slight movement• Cartilaginous• 2 types:

– Symphysis (located along midline of body) (fibrocartilage)

– Syndesmoses (radius + ulna; tibia + fibula)

3. DIARTHROSES

• Freely moveable joints• Most mobile and complex• Synovial joints• See drawing• 6 kinds:

– Hinge, pivot, gliding, condyloid, saddle, ball and socket

A. HINGE JOINTS

• Movement in one plane• Flexion (decrease angle between 2

bones)• Extension (increase angle between

2 bones)• Elbow, knee, ankle, occipital

condyles and atlas, interphalangeal

B. PIVOT JOINTS

• Rotational movement in one plane• A projection of one bone

articulates with a ring or notch of another bone

• C1 and C2, head of radius and radial notch of ulna

C. GLIDING JOINTS

• Side to side movements (slight movement)

• Flat surfaces slide over each other• Carpals, tarsals, clavicles and

sternum, articular facets of vertebrae

D. CONDYLOID

• Movement in two planes (biaxial)• Permits flexion, extension,

abduction, adduction, circumduction

• Interphalangeal joints, carpo-metacarpal joints (wrist)

E. SADDLE

• Carpometacarpal joint at base of thumb

• One convex face, one concave face

F. BALL AND SOCKET

• Movement in all planes

• Shoulder and hip joints

MOVEMENT AT DIARTHROTIC JOINTS

• Depends upon shape of articulating surfaces of bones, position of ligaments, muscles and tendons

ANGULAR MOVEMENTS

• Flexion• Extension• Hyperextension• Plantarflexion• Dorsiflexion• Abduction• Adduction

CIRCULAR MOVEMENTS

• Rotation• Circumduction• Supination• Pronation

SPECIAL MOVEMENTS

• Inversion• Eversion• Protraction• Retraction• Elevation• Depression• Gliding (simplest; no circular or angular)

HUMEROSCAPULAR JOINT

• Glenoid labrum• Superior, medial and inferior

glenohumeral ligaments• Rotator cuff

HIP JOINT

• Less movement than shoulder• One of strongest• Ileofemoral, ischiofemoral and

pubofemoral ligaments

KNEE JOINT

• Largest, one of most complex and most frequently injured

• Medial and lateral menisci (fibrocartilage pads)

• Anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments

• MCL and LCL• 13 bursae• Patellar ligament

VERTEBRAL JOINTS

• Herniated discs

WHAT AM I???

• Osteoarthritis• Bursitis• Rheumatoid arthritis• Gout• Osgood-Schlatter Disease• Arthroscopy