Anatomy: Petr Hájek, MD, Phd. Head of Anatomy Dept. Assoc. Prof. Dáša Slížová, MD, Phd. Senior Lecturer
Anatomy: Petr Hájek, MD, Phd. Head of Anatomy Dept. Assoc. Prof. Dáša Slížová, MD, Phd. Senior Lecturer
Anatomy: Petr Hájek, MD, Phd. Head of Anatomy Dept. Assoc. Prof. Dáša Slížová, MD, Phd. Senior Lecturer
• sources of information
• literature
• how to study
• about laboratory classes
Sources of information
• 0) Study information system – credit conditions, exam terms,…
• 1) official website of the Department
https://www.lfhk.cuni.cz/anatomy - among other:
Contact - Names of teachers with contacts
Study information – long-term valid and the most relevant
information
Sources of information
• 2) educational server Moodle
https://moodle.lfhk.cuni.cz/moodle2 -
a) Basic electronic communication via students‘ mailboxes
b) Study materials (for lectures, practical classes and selfstudy),
sylabi, external links, results of tests, final exam questions
Topical: latin vocabulary, anatomical atlas on-line
https://moodle.lfhk.cuni.cz/moodle2/mod/page/view.php?id=9841
• 3) Microsoft Teams – lectures in case of distant education
• 4) Facebook „Anatomie Hradec” – less formal communication,
urgent alerts, tips
If we need to distinguish
• lateral - medial 2 formations:
• internal - external
• proximal – distal
= alternatively to
• palmar – dorsal ventral - dorsal
/ plantar – dorsal
(in terminal part of the limbs) Revision question:
complete the statement: The wrist is …….. toward the elbow.
Anatomical terminology
• It is official and obligatoty terminology used in all branches of
medicine, since 1895.
• 1998 – Terminologia anatomica – the last revision
• Latin terminology (passive knowledge) and English terminology
(active knowledge). Example:
collar bone (lay expression) = clavicula (Lat) = clavicle (Eng)
• Eponyms (alternative names of selected formations by their
explorers or promoters). Example:
canalis ulnaris (Lat) = ulnar canal (Eng) = Guyon‘s canal (Eponym)
LOCOMOTOR SYSTEM
• General osteology
- bony tissue
- bone as an organ
- structure of a bone
- classification of bones according to their shape
- developement, ossification
- description of separated bones, terminology
- vascular and nervous supply
Skeleton – biological function
• passive locomotor system
• hard internal substrate or outer box for
organs
• articles of the skeleton are connected in
joints,
the movement is possible in joint by
contraction of muscles
Osseous tissue
• belongs to supportive tissues
- cells (osteoblasts and osteocytes)
- intercellular matrix (fibrous and mineralized)
• Fibrilar bony tissue – fibers arranged randomly
• Lamelar bony tissue - in layers
- compacta bone – dense arrangement
-- „coat“ layers – parallel
-- Haversian system – concentric tubes
- spongy bone – porous
Bone as an organ
• is formed also by other types of tissue:
fibrous connective tissue (periosteum), cartilage (joint surfaces
or e.g. anterior ¼ of ribs), nerve fibers, vessels, bone marrow
Structure of a bone Periosteum
Compact bone
Medullary cavity
(bone marrow)
Layers: Spongy bone
• PERIOSTEUM
contains vessels, participates on ossification, responsible for
sensitivity and healing)
• COMPACT BONE
• SPONGY BONE
(in flat bones so called “diploe“ )
• MEDULLARY CAVITY – in long bones, contains bone marrow (red,
yellow, grey)
sesamoid bone
short bone
diploe
Development of bones
OSSIFICATION – creation of bony tissue from another supportive
tissue
1) INTRAMEMBRANOUS ossification:
• from fibrous connective tissue
• original development from the fylogenetical point of view
• skullcap, part of the bones of the face (splanchnocranium), most
of the clavicle
2) CHONDRAL ossification:
• creation from a gristle
• cartilaginous model is reorganized
- from the surface
- from the center of the cartilage (so called ossification centra –
they spread and fuse together)
diaphysis