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Description
Chapter 2 Notes
Transcript
Therapeutic Kinesiology Instructor Manual: Ch02 p.6
TK INSTRUCTOR MANUAL: CHAPTER 2
The Skeletal System
Chapter manuals include:
Objectives
Lecture Notes
Suggested Classroom and Student Development Activities
For other chapter-by-chapter resources, see:
Key Term Quizzes
Muscle Origin and Insertion Worksheets
Muscle OIAs List by Chapter
MyTest Test Bank
For additional resources see “Teaching Tips and Tools”:
7 research-based learning principles for kinesiology courses in massage
5-step self-directed learning cycle for body mechanics courses
Tools that build metacognitive skills: e.g., concept (mind) maps, grading rubrics, and self-assessments inventories
OBJECTIVES
List the structures and functions of the skeletal system.
List the three elements found in connective tissues and the types of connective tissues.
Describe how manual therapy can affect the tissue properties of thixotropy and viscosity.
Define and contrast the properties elasticity and plasticity.
Describe and contrast the two types of bone tissue.
Define and describe the process of bone remodeling.
List the five types of bone and provide an example of each type.
Name and describe two properties of bone and describe how bone fractures.
List and describe 13 types of bony landmarks.
Describe two types of cartilage and name three connective tissues in the skeletal system.
Describe a bursa and its function.
Name and describe the three classifications of joints in the body.
Describe a synovial joint and list six types of synovial joints with examples of each.
Name and contrast the degrees of movement in axial joints with nonaxial joints.
Define the line of gravity and the center of gravity.
Define joint neutral and describe its relationship to optimal posture.
Name and describe five types of mechanical stress.
LECTURE NOTES
SKELETAL SYSTEM
Made up of 206 bones, joints, associated tissues
Five major functions
Support
Protection
Storage
Blood production
Movement
Two major parts
Axial: The central axis of trunk and head
Appendicular: The upper and lower limbs
ELEMENTS OF CONNECTIVE TISSUE (CT)
Most abundant tissue in the body
Types of CT
Blood
Bone
Cartilage
CT Proper
Loose: Superficial fascia and adipose
Dense: Regular and irregular
Three building blocks of CT
Fibers
Collagen
Most abundant protein in mammals
Most prolific fiber in skeletal system
Made of three spiraled collagen molecules
Mature fibers have tensile strength of steel
Elastin
Recticular fibers
Cells Examples: red blood cells, osteocytes (bone cells), chondrocytes
Fluid: Ground substance, is hydrophilic (“water-loving”)
CT can change under stress
Agents of change: Movement, postural stresses, deep tissue work
CT properties
Thixotropy: Responds to variances in temperature by changing from a gel to a sol (liquid) and back again.
Viscosity: Time-dependent property of thick fluid substance to resist and dampen pressure. Viscous fluids in the body resist compression and reduce joint friction.
Elasticity: Ability to stretch and rebound.
Plasticity: Irreversible deformation of tissue that occurs in response to forces that exceed its elastic limit.
Piezoelectric effect: Generates electrical potentials.
CT in skeletal system
Bone
CT proper
Cartilage
Blood
Two kinds of bone tissue
Compact - Strong, resists bending stress, provides protective outer layer
Spongy - Inner layer, loosely arranged lattice, trabeculae along lines of tension
Types of bone: Long, short, flat, irregular, sesamoid
Bone remodeling Continual regenerative process
Osteocytes: Reabsorb old tissue
Osteoblasts: Produce new tissue
Bone properties
Strength
Ability to resist fracture under stress
Comes from calcium and minerals
Elasticity
Ability to deform and reform under stress
Measured by load bone can withstand
Bone fractures
Bone fractures when load exceeds mechanical strength
Bones always heal stronger after fractures
There are many types of fractures
Bony landmarks
Types of landmarks: condyle, fossa, process, foramen
Reasons to learn bony landmarks
To verify location of touch
To locate muscular attachments
To check alignment and symmetry
Three types of cartilage
Hyaline: Covers articulating surface of bones in synovial joints
Elastic: Flexible, found in ears
Fibrocartilage: Found in disks
Two types of dense connective tissues
Regular CT has parallel fibers: Tendons, ligaments, joint capsules
Irregular CT has crosshatched fibers: Fascia, periosteum, aponeurosis,
Miscellaneous joint structures
Bursa: Fluid-filled sacs
Found under tendons and around joints
Reduces friction between moving tissues
Synovial sheaths: Fluid-filled sheaths
Encase tendons around joints
Protect tendons by allowing them to slide
Inflammatory conditions
Bursitis: Inflammation of bursa
Tendinitis: Inflammation of tendons
Tenosynovitis: Inflammation of synovial sheaths
JOINT CLASSIFICATIONS
Three major classifications
Synarthrosis
Fibrous joint, immoveable (e.g., sutures)
Amphiarthrosis
Fibrocartilage joint, semimoveable (e.g., intervertebral)
Diarthrosis
Synovial, freely moveable
Synovial joint structures
Joint capsule: Sleeve-like cuff
Joint cavity: Enclosed by the capsule
Hyaline cartilage: Covers articulating bones
Synovial membrane: Lines capsule, secretes fluid
Synovial fluid: Fills capsule, nourishes, lubricates, cleans
Fibrocartilage disk
Only in joints that work under high loads
Example: knee, jaw, sc joint
Joint surface shapes
Ovoid: Convex surface fits into a concave surface (e.g., hip)
Sellar: Articulating surface has both convex and concave shapes (e.g., knee)
Understanding shapes of joint surfaces improves skills
In joint approximation
In passive joint motion
In assessing active joint motion
Six types of synovial joints
Ball-and-socket: Most congruent and mobile
Examples: hips, shoulders
Ellipsoid or condyloid (condyle “knuckle”): Rounded half ball in shallow dish
Example: wrists
Hinge: Bony cylinder fits into a rounded trough
Examples: knees, elbows
Plane or gliding: Two slightly curved nearly flat surfaces
Example: facet joint
Pivot: Rounded end of one bone projects into a ring-like shape of another bone
Examples: proximal radioulnar and atlanto-axial
Saddle: Two saddle-shaped surfaces in reciprocal, interlocking relationship
Examples: base of thumb, sternoclavicular
Degrees of motion
Nonaxial: 0, gliding
Uniaxial: 1, hinge
Biaxial: 2, ellipsoid
Triaxial (multiaxial): 3 or more, ball-and-socket
COG and LOG in optimal posture
Center of gravity aligns along line of gravity in optimal posture
Headthoraxpelvis (three body masses) stack over each other
Five mechanical stresses
Compression
Tension
Shear
Torque
Bending
Loading and lines of force
Combined loading: two or more forces
Lines of force
Pathway along which a force travels
Longer the pathway, greater distribution of stress
Pathways improve with optimal posture
SUGGESTED CLASSROOM AND STUDENT DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES
PROVIDE AN OVERVIEW OF CLASS
Before class, write a short, schematic overview of the class on the board, then go over it at the beginning of class. For example:
Today's class covers:
Connective tissue
Tissues of the skeletal system
Joint classifications
Skeletal alignment and gravity
Activities: Review, lecture and learning activities, recap, and homework
EXPLORING TECHNIQUES EXERCISES
Tactile Explorations of Viscosity with Corn-Starch (p. 27).
Review the connective tissue properties of thixotropy and viscosity, elasticity and plasticity, and the piezoelectric effect (pp. 2627). Discuss how these properties affect tissue responsiveness and quality of touch (speed, pressure, direction).
Joint Approximation (p. 37).
Use this exercise to study joint shapes and articulation, joint compression, and how lines of force pass through the skeleton. While demonstrating a joint approximation exercise on a joint, make sure to name the joint, identify what type of joint it is, demonstrate its range of movement and identify the number of degrees it can move, and briefly discuss the shape of its articulating surfaces.
Axial Compression Test to Assess Lines of Force (p. 43).
HANDS-ON EXERCISE: Trace the bones of one major part of the body from one bony landmark to another.
BONY LANDMARK EXERCISE: Identify the major types of bony landmarks on a skeleton with sticky notes.
There is a list of the major types of bony landmarks on page 31. Have students self-palpate these landmarks as you describe them
© 2013 by Education, Inc. Foster, Instructor Resources for Therapeutic Kinesiology
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