Skip to main content
Back

LECTURE: Chap 8 Joints

Study Guide - Smart Notes

Tailored notes based on your materials, expanded with key definitions, examples, and context.

Joints (Articulations)

Introduction to Joints

Joints, also known as articulations, are sites where two or more bones meet. They play a crucial role in providing the skeleton with mobility while also holding the skeletal elements together for stability.

  • Primary Functions: Enable movement and provide structural support.

  • Classification: Joints are classified by their structure and function.

Classification of Joints

Structural Classification

Structural classification is based on the material binding the bones together and the presence or absence of a joint cavity. There are three main types:

  • Fibrous Joints

  • Cartilaginous Joints

  • Synovial Joints

Fibrous Joints

General Features

Fibrous joints are connected by dense fibrous connective tissue and lack a joint cavity. Most are immovable, but the degree of movement depends on the length of the connective tissue fibers.

  • No joint cavity

  • Immovable or slightly movable

Types of Fibrous Joints

  • Sutures: Found only in the skull, sutures are joints held together with very short, interconnecting fibers. They allow for minimal movement and eventually ossify with age.

  • Syndesmoses: Bones are connected by a ligament. The amount of movement depends on the length of the ligament. Example: the distal connection between the tibia and fibula.

  • Gomphoses: A "peg-in-socket" joint, such as a tooth anchored into its socket by the periodontal ligament.

Cartilaginous Joints

General Features

Cartilaginous joints are united by cartilage and, like fibrous joints, lack a joint cavity. They are not highly movable.

  • No joint cavity

  • Not highly movable

Types of Cartilaginous Joints

  • Synchondroses: Bones are united by hyaline cartilage. Most are immovable. Example: the epiphyseal plate in growing long bones and the joint between the first rib and the manubrium of the sternum.

  • Symphyses: Bones are united by fibrocartilage, which provides strength with flexibility. Example: intervertebral joints and the pubic symphysis.

Examples and Applications

  • Sutures: Coronal suture of the skull.

  • Syndesmoses: Distal tibiofibular joint.

  • Gomphoses: Tooth in alveolar socket.

  • Synchondroses: Epiphyseal plate, first sternocostal joint.

  • Symphyses: Intervertebral discs, pubic symphysis.

Additional info: Synovial joints, their structure, and functional classification are covered in subsequent slides/sections, which would include details on joint cavities, articular cartilage, and types of movement allowed.

Pearson Logo

Study Prep