Chapter 8 Bone Tissue
Dynamic tissue that continually remodels itself Bones and bone tissue
bone or osseous tissue is a connective tissue with a matrix hardened by minerals (calcium phosphate) bones make up the skeletal system
individual bones are made up of bone tissue, marrow, cartilage & periosteum
Functions of the skeletal system
support, protection, movement, blood formation, mineral reservoir, pH balance & detoxification
Shapes of Bones
Structure of a Flat Bone
External and internal surfaces of flat bone are composed of compact bone Middle layer is spongy bone (diploe). No marrow cavity Blow to the skull may fracture outer layer and crush diploe, but not harm inner compact bone
Structure of a Long Bone
Periosteum & articular cartilage Compact & spongy bone Endosteum Yellow marrow
General Features of Bones
Shaft (diaphysis) is cylinder of compact bone containing marrow cavity (medullary cavity) & lined with endosteum (cells providing bone resorption & deposition) Enlarged ends (epiphyses) are spongy bone covered with a layer of compact bone
enlarged to strengthen joint & provide for attachment of tendons and ligaments
Joint surface covered with cartilage (lubrication) Remainder of bone covered with periosteum
outer fibrous layer continuous with tendons
perforating or Sharpeys fibers penetrate into bone matrix
inner osteogenic layer important for growth & healing
Epiphyseal plate or line depends on age
Cells of Osseous Tissue
Osteogenic cells reside in endosteum or periosteum
multiply continuously & differentiate into osteoblasts
Osteoblasts form organic matter of matrix & help to mineralize it in response to stress or fractures Osteocytes are osteoblasts that have become trapped
reside in lacunae but are connected to each other via canaliculi signal osteoclasts & osteoblasts about mechanical stresses
Cells of Osseous Tissue
Osteoclasts develop in bone marrow by the fusion of the same stem cells that give rise to monocytes of the blood Reside in pits called resorption bays that they have eaten into the surface of the bone
Matrix of Osseous Tissue
Dry weight is 1/3 organic & 2/3 inorganic matter Organic matter
collagen, glycosaminoglycans (amino sugars), proteoglycans (heavily glycosylated proteins) & glycoproteins
Inorganic matter
85% hydroxyapatite (crystallized calcium phosphate salt) 10% calcium carbonate other minerals
Combination provides for strength & resilience
minerals resist compression; collagen resists tension
Role of Collagen & Minerals
Compact Bone
Osteons or haversian systems
cylinders of tissue formed from layers of matrix concentrically arranged around a blood vessel
lamellae are the individual layers haversian canal holds the blood vessels
osteocytes connected to each other and the haversian blood supply by tiny cell processes
Perforating canals or Volkmann canals
branches from nutrient arteries that run perpendicular to the haversian canals
Circumferential or outer lamellae
Histology of Compact Bone
Spongy Bone
Spongelike appearance formed by rods and plates of bone called trabeculae
spaces filled with red bone marrow
Trabeculae have few osteons or haversian canals
no osteocyte is far from blood of bone marrow
Provides strength with little weight
trabeculae develop along bones lines of stress
Bone Marrow
Soft tissue that occupies the medullary cavity of a long bone or the spaces amid the trabeculae of spongy bone Red marrow looks like thick blood
mesh of reticular fibers and immature cells hemopoietic means produces blood cells in adults found in axial skeleton & girdles
Yellow marrow
fatty marrow of long bones in adults
Gelatinous marrow
yellow marrow replaced with reddish jelly
Intramembranous Ossification
Produces flat bones of skull & clavicle Steps of the process
Mesenchyme (embryonic undifferentiated connective tissue) condenses into a sheet of soft tissue
transforms into a network of soft trabeculae
osteoblasts gather on the trabeculae to form osteoid tissue (uncalcified bone) calcium phosphate is deposited in the matrix transforming the osteoblasts into osteocytes osteoclasts remodel the center to contain marrow spaces & osteoblasts remodel the surface to form compact bone mesenchyme at the surface gives rise to periosteum
Endochondral Ossification
Primary ossification center forms in cartilage model
chondrocytes near the center swell to form primary ossification center matrix is reduced & model becomes weak at that point cells of the perichondrium produce a bony collar cuts off diffusion of nutrients and hastens their death
Primary marrow space formed by periosteal bud
osteogenic cells invade & transform into osteoblasts osteoid tissue deposited and calcified into trabeculae at same time osteoclasts work to enlarge the primary marrow cavity
Primary Ossification Center & Marrow Space
Both form in center of cartilage model -- same process begins again subsequently at ends of cartilage model.
The Metaphysis
Transitional zone between head and shaft of a developing long bone Zone of reserve cartilage is layer of resting cartilage Zone of cell proliferation is layer
chondrocytes multiply forming columns of flat lacunae
Zone of cell hypertrophy shows hypertrophy Zone of calcification shows mineralization between columns of lacunae Zone of bone deposition -- chondrocytes die and each channel is filled with osteoblasts and blood vessels to form a haversian canal & osteon
Secondary Ossification Center
Begin to form in the epiphyses near time of birth Same stages occur as in primary ossification center
result is center of epiphyseal cartilage being transformed into spongy bone
Hyaline cartilage remains on joint surface as articular cartilage and at junction of diaphysis & epiphysis (epiphyseal plate)
each side of epiphyseal plate has a metaphysis
Metaphysis & Secondary Ossification Center
Metaphysis is cartilagenous material that remains as growth plate between medullary cavity & secondary ossification centers in the epiphyses.
Epiphyseal Plates
Bone Growth and Remodeling
Grow and remodel themselves throughout life
growing brain or starting to walk athletes or history of manual labor have greater density & mass of bone
Cartilage grows by both appositional & interstitial growth Bones increase in length by interstitial growth of epiphyseal plate Bones increase in width by appositional growth
osteoblasts lay down matrix in layers parallel to the outer surface & osteoclasts dissolve bone on inner surface if one process outpaces the other, bone deformities occur (osteitis deformans)
Achondroplastic Dwarfism
Short stature but normalsized head and trunk
long bones of the limbs stop growing in childhood but other bones unaffected
Result of spontaneous mutation when DNA is replicated
mutant allele is dominant
Pituitary dwarf has lack of growth hormone
short stature with normal proportions
Mineral Deposition
Mineralization is crystallization process in which ions (calcium, phosphate & others) are removed from blood plasma & deposited in bone tissue Steps of the mineralization process
osteoblasts produce collagen fibers that spiral along the length of the osteon in alternating directions fibers become encrusted with minerals hardening matrix
ion concentration must reach the solubility product for crystal formation to occur & then positive feedback forms more
Ectopic ossification is abnormal calcification
may occur in lungs, brain, eyes, muscles, tendons or arteries (arteriosclerosis)
Mineral Resorption
Process of dissolving bone & releasing minerals into the blood
performed by osteoclasts (think M) ruffled border
hydrogen pumps in the cell membrane secrete hydrogen ions into the space between the osteoclast & the bone chloride ions follow by electrical attraction hydrochloric acid & a pH of 4 dissolve bone minerals an enzyme (acid phosphatase) digests the collagen
Braces on the teeth reposition teeth by creating greater pressure of the tooth on the bone
stimulating osteoclasts & osteoblasts to remodel jaw
Functions of Calcium & Phosphate
Phosphate is a component of DNA, RNA, ATP, phospholipids, & acid-base buffers Calcium is needed for communication between neurons, muscle contraction, blood clotting & exocytosis Calcium plasma concentration is 9.2 to 10.4 mg/dL -- 45% is as Ca+2, rest is bound to plasma proteins & is not physiologically active Phosphate plasma concentration is 3.5 to 4.0 mg/dL & occurs in 2 forms: HPO4 -2 & H2PO4-
Ion Imbalances
Changes in phosphate concentration have little effect Changes in calcium can be serious
hypocalcemia is deficiency of blood calcium
causes excessive excitability of nervous system leading to muscle spasms, tremors or tetanus
carpopedal spasm or laryngospasm
calcium normally binds to cell surface contributing to resting membrane potential
with less calcium, sodium channels open more easily exciting neuron
hypercalcemia
excessive calcium binding to cell surface makes sodium channels less likely to open, depressing nervous system
Homeostasis depends on calcitriol, calcitonin & PTH
Carpopedal Spasm
Hypocalcemia causing overexcitability of nervous system and muscle spasm
Calcitriol (Activated Vitamin D)
Produced by the following process
UV radiation penetrating to the dermal blood vessels converts a cholesterol derivative (7-dehydrocholesterol) to (cholecalciferol) D3 liver converts it to calcidiol kidney converts it to calcitriol
Calcitriol behaves as a hormone: blood [Ca2+]
stimulates intestine to absorb calcium & phosphate reduces urinary secretion of calcium & phosphate promotes osteoclast activity
Abnormal softness of the bones is called rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults
Calcitriol Synthesis & Action
Calcitonin
Secreted by C cells of the thyroid gland when calcium concentration rises too high Functions
reduces osteoclast activity by as much as 70% in 15 minutes increases the number & activity of osteoblasts
Important role in children, but little effect in adults
calcitonin deficiency is not known to cause any disease in adults may be useful in reducing bone loss in osteoporosis
Parathyroid Hormone
Secreted by the parathyroid glands on the posterior surface of the thyroid gland Released when calcium blood level is too low Functions
inhibits activity of osteoblasts stimulates osteoclast multiplication & activity reduces calcium secretion & phosphate reabsorption in the kidney, leading to in free [Ca2+] stimulates the production of an enzyme in the kidneys that carries out the last step in calcitriol synthesis
Control of Calcium Levels
Other Factors Affecting Bone
20 or more hormones, vitamins & growth factors not well understood Bone growth especially rapid at puberty
hormones stimulate proliferation of osteogenic cells and chondrocytes in growth plate adolescent girls grow faster than boys & reach their full height earlier (estrogen has stronger effect) males grow for a longer time
Growth ceases when epiphyseal plate closes
anabolic steroids may cause premature closure of growth plate producing short adult stature
Fractures and Their Repair
Stress fracture is a break caused by abnormal trauma to a bone
car accident, fall, athletics, etc
Pathological fracture is a break in a bone weakened by some other disease
bone cancer or osteoporosis
Fractures are classified by their structural characteristics -- causing a break in the skin, breaking into multiple pieces, etc
or after a physician who first described it
Types of Bone Fractures (Table 8.3)
Healing of Fractures
Normally healing takes 8 - 12 weeks (longer in elderly) Stages of healing
fracture hematoma (1)
broken vessels form a blood clot
granulation tissue (2)
fibrous tissue formed by fibroblasts & infiltrated by capillaries
callus formation (3)
soft callus of fibrocartilage replaced by hard callus of bone in 6 weeks
remodeling (4) occurs over next 6 months as spongy bone is replaced with compact bone
Healing of Fractures
1 2
Treatment of Fractures
Closed reduction
fragments are aligned with manipulation & casted
Open reduction
surgical exposure & repair with plates & screws
Traction is not used in elderly due to risks of long-term confinement to bed
hip fractures are pinned & early walking is encouraged
Electrical stimulation is used on fractures that take longer than 2 months to heal Orthopedics = prevention & correction of injuries and disorders of the bones, joints & muscles
Osteoporosis
Most common bone disease Bones lose mass & become brittle due to loss of both organic matrix & minerals
risk of fracture of hip, wrist & vertebral column lead to fatal complications such as pneumonia widows (dowagers) hump is deformed spine
Postmenopausal white women at greatest risk
by age 70, average loss is 30% of bone mass
ERT slows its progress, but best treatment is prevention -- exercise & calcium intake (1000 mg/day) between ages 25 and 40