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- Chapter 7 Lecture Outline:
- Axial Skeleton
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- The bones of the skeleton form an internal framework to support soft
tissues, protect vital organs, bear the body’s weight, and help us move.
- Typically, there are 206 bones in an adult skeleton, although this
number varies in some individuals.
- A larger number of bones are present at birth, but the total number decreases
with growth and maturity as some separate bones fuse.
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- The axial skeleton is composed of the bones along the central axis of
the body,
- the skull
- the vertebral column
- the thoracic cage
- The appendicular skeleton consists of the bones of the appendages
- upper and lower limbs
- the bones that hold the limbs to the trunk of the body.
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- Cranial bones form the rounded cranium, which completely surrounds and
encloses the brain.
- Facial bones form the bones of the face. They also
- protect the entrances to the digestive and respiratory systems as well
as
- provide attachment sites for facial muscles
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- The lower jaw is formed by the mandible.
- The prominent “chin” of the mandible is called the mental protuberance.
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- The largest cavity is the cranial cavity, which encloses, cushions, and
supports the brain.
- The skull also has several smaller cavities, including the orbits (eye
sockets), the oral cavity (mouth), the nasal cavity, and the paranasal
sinuses.
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- Numerous bone markings
- canals
- fissures
- foramina
- passageways for blood vessels and nerves
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- Sutures are immovable fibrous joints that form the boundaries between
the cranial bones.
- Dense regular connective tissue seals cranial bones firmly together at a
suture.
- Allow the cranium to grow and expand during childhood.
- In adulthood, when cranial growth has stopped, the sutures fuse and are
obliterated.
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- Have a mucous lining that helps to humidify and warm inhaled air.
- Cause these skull bones to be lighter.
- Provide resonance to the voice.
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- Three tiny ear bones called auditory ossicles are housed within the
petrous region of each temporal bone.
- the malleus
- the incus
- the stapes
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- Slender, curved bone located inferior to the skull between the mandible
and the larynx (voice box).
- Does not articulate with any other bone in the skeleton.
- Serves as sites for attachment for tongue and larynx muscles and
ligaments.
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- The regions between the cranial bones are thickened, fibrous membrane
remnants that are not yet ossified.
- Sometimes referred to as the “soft spots” on a baby’s head.
- They close by 15 months of age.
- When a baby travels through the birth canal, the cranial bones overlap
at these fontanels, in order to ease the baby’s passage.
- Newborns frequently have a “cone-shaped” head due to this temporary
deformation.
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- Composed of 26 bones, including
- 24 individual vertebrae and the
- fused vertebrae that form both the sacrum and the coccyx
- The vertebral column has several functions:
- providing vertical support for the body
- supporting the weight of the head
- helping to maintain upright body position
- helping to transfer axial skeletal weight to the appendicular skeleton
of the lower limbs
- housing and protecting the delicate spinal cord and providing a
passageway for spinal nerves connecting to the spinal cord
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- Kyphosis is an exaggerated thoracic curvature that is directed
posteriorly, producing a “hunchback” look.
- Lordosis is an exaggerated lumbar curvature, often called “swayback,”
that is observed as a protrusion of the abdomen and buttocks.
- Scoliosis is an abnormal lateral curvature that sometimes results
during development when both the vertebral arch and body fail to form,
or form incompletely, on one side of a vertebra.
- scoliosis is the most common spinal curvature deformity.
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- Consists of the thoracic vertebrae posteriorly, the ribs laterally, and
the sternum anteriorly.
- Acts as a protective cage around vital organs, such as the heart, lungs,
trachea, and esophagus.
- Provides attachment points for many muscles supporting the pectoral
girdles, the chest, the neck, the shoulders, the back, and the muscles
involved in respiration.
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- Both males and females 12 pairs
- Ribs 1–7 are called true ribs. At the anterior body wall, the true ribs
connect individually to the sternum by separate cartilaginous
extensions called costal cartilages.
- Ribs 8–12 are called false ribs because their costal cartilages do not
attach directly to the sternum. The costal cartilages of ribs 8–10 fuse
to the costal cartilage of rib 7 and thus indirectly articulate with
the sternum.
- The last two pairs of false ribs (ribs 11 and 12) are called floating
ribs because they have no connection with the sternum.
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