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The musculoskeletal system (also known as the locomotor system) is an organ system that gives animals the ability to move using the muscular and skeletal systems. The musculoskeletal system provides form, stability, and movement to the human body. It is made up of the body's bones (the skeleton), muscles, cartilage, tendons, ligaments, joints, and other connective tissue (described as the tissue that supports and binds tissues and organs together). The musculoskeletal system's primary functions include supporting the body, allowing motion, and protecting vital organs.[1]. The musculoskeletal system refers to the system having its muscles attached to an internal skeletal system and is necessary for humans to move to a more favorable position.

Structures in humans[]

Skeletal[]

Main article: Human skeleton
File:Human skeleton front.svg

Front view of a skeleton of an adult human

The Skeletal System serves many important functions; it provides the shape and form for our bodies in addition to supporting, protecting, allowing bodily movement, producing blood for the body, and storing minerals.[2] The number of bones in the human skeletal system is a controversial topic. Humans are born with about 300 to 350 bones, however, many bones fuse together between birth and maturity. As a result an average adult skeleton consists of 208 bones. The number of bones varies according to the method used to derive the count. While some consider certain structures to be a single bone with multiple parts, others may see it as a single part with multiple bones.[3] There are five general classifications of bones. These are Long bones, Short bones, Flat bones, Irregular bones, and Sesamoid bones. The human skeleton is composed of both fused and individual bones supported by ligaments, tendons, muscles and cartilage. It is a complex structure with two distinct divisions. These are the axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton.[4]


Function[]

The Skeletal System serves as a framework for tissues and organs to attach themselves to. This system acts as a protective structure for vital organs. Major examples of this are the brain being protected by the skull and the lungs being protected by the rib cage.

Located in long bones are two distinctions of bone marrow (yellow and red). The yellow marrow has fatty connective tissue and is found in the marrow cavity. During starvation, the body uses the fat in yellow marrow for energy.[5] The red marrow of some bones is an important site for blood cell production, approximately 2.6 million red blood cells per second in order to replace existing cells that have been destroyed by the liver.[2] Here all erythrocytes, platelets, and most leukocytes form in adults. From the red marrow, erythrocytes, platelets, and leukocytes migrate to the blood to do their special tasks.

Another function of bones is the storage of certain minerals. Calcium and phosphorus are among the main minerals being stored. The importance of this storage "device" helps to regulate mineral balance in the bloodstream. When the fluctuation of minerals is high, these minerals are stored in bone; when it is low it will be withdrawn from the bone.

Muscular[]

Main article: muscle
File:Illu muscle tissues.jpg

Types of muscle and their appearance

There are three types of muscles - cardiac, skeletal, and smooth. Smooth muscles are used to control the flow of substances within the lumens of hollow organs, and are not consciously controlled. Skeletal and cardiac muscles have striations that are visible under a microscope due to the components within their cells. Only skeletal and smooth muscles are part of the musculoskeletal system and only the skeletal muscles can move the body. Cardiac muscles are found in the heart and are used only to circulate blood; like the smooth muscles, these muscles are not under conscious control. Skeletal muscles are attached to bones and arranged in opposing groups around joints.[6] Muscles are innervated, to communicate nervous energy to[7], by nerves, which conduct electrical currents from the central nervous system and cause the muscles to contract.[8]

Contraction initiation[]

Main article: muscle contraction

In mammals, when a muscle contracts, a series of reactions occur. Muscle contraction is stimulated by the motor neuron sending a message to the muscles from the somatic nervous system. Depolarization of the motor neuron results in neurotransmitters being released from the nerve terminal. The space between the nerve terminal and the muscle cell is called the neuromuscular junction. These neurotransmitters diffuse across the synapse and bind to specific receptor sites on the cell membrane of the muscle fiber. When enough receptors are stimulated, an action potential is generated and the permeability of the sarcolemma is altered. This process is known as initiation.[9]


Joints[]

Main article: joint

Joints are structures that connect individual bones and may allow bones to move against each other to cause movement. There are two divisions of joints, diarthroses which allow extensive mobility between two or more articular heads, and false joints or synarthroses, joints that are immovable, that allow little or no movement and are predominantly fibrous. Synovial joints, joints that are not directly joined, are lubricated by a solution called synovia that is produced by the synovial membranes. This fluid lowers the friction between the articular surfaces and is kept within an articular capsule, binding the joint with its taut tissue.[4] they include:

Tendons[]

Main article: tendon

A tendon is a tough, flexible band of fibrous connective tissue that connects muscles to bones.[10] Muscles gradually become tendon as the cells become closer to the origins and insertions on bones, eventually becoming solid bands of tendon that merge into the periosteum of individual bones. As muscles contract, tendons transmit the forces to the rigid bones, pulling on them and causing movement.

Ligaments[]

Main article: ligament

A ligament is a small band of dense, white, fibrous elastic tissue.[4] Ligaments connect the ends of bones together in order to form a joint. Most ligaments limit dislocation, or prevent certain movements that may cause breaks. Since they are only elastic they increasingly lengthen when under pressure. When this occurs the ligament may be susceptible to break resulting in an unstable joint.

Bursa[]

Main article: bursa (anatomy)

A bursa is a small fluid-filled sac made of white fibrous tissue and lined with synovial membrane. It provides a cushion between bones and tendons and/or muscles around a joint; bursa are filled with synovial fluid and are found around almost every major joint of the body.

Diseases and disorders[]

Because many other body systems, including the vascular, nervous, and integumentary systems, are interrelated, disorders of one of these systems may also affect the musculoskeletal system and complicate the diagnosis of the disorder's origin. Diseases of the musculoskeletal system mostly encompass functional disorders or motion discrepancies; the level of impairment depends specifically on the problem and its severity. Articular (of or pertaining to the joints)[11] disorders are the most common. However, also among the diagnoses are: primary muscular diseases, neurologic (related to the medical science that deals with the nervous system and disorders affecting it)[12] deficits, toxins, endocrine abnormalities, metabolic disorders, infectious diseases, blood and vascular disorders, and nutritional imbalances. Disorders of muscles from another body system can bring about irregularities such as: impairment of ocular motion and control, respiratory dysfunction, and bladder malfunction. Complete paralysis, paresis, or ataxia may be caused by primary muscular dysfunctions of infectious or toxic origin; however, the primary disorder is usually related to the nervous system, with the muscular system acting as the effector organ, an organ capable of responding to a stimulus, especially a nerve impulse.[13]

Musculoskeletal disorders[]

Carpal tunnel syndrome[]

Main article: carpal tunnel syndrome

Carpal tunnel syndrome is a very common condition among the trapped nerve syndromes. It occurs when the median nerve at the wrist is pressured in the carpal tunnel region. This results in the relocation of the median nerve, tendons, and blood vessels, which pass through the carpal tunnel to the fingers and thumb. This compression may cause motor function issues in the hand.[14]

Osteoporosis[]

Main article: osteoporosis

Osteoporosis is a bone disorder related to a change in metabolic rates within a certain bone. It occurs when the rate at which the bone breaks down, bone resorption, increases while formation of the bone decreases, resulting in a loss of bone mass. This condition causes the loss of calcium and phosphate which affects the entire skeletal system. If not treated the spine may curve and the ribs can fall on the pelvic rim.[14]


Limbs[]

Bones[]

Main article: Bones

See also[]

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).
  1. Mooar, Pekka Introduction. Merck Manual. URL accessed on 2008-11-12.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Applegate, Edith, Kent Van De Graaff The Skeletal System. URL accessed on 2009-01-03.
  3. Engelbert, Phillis, Carol DeKane Nagel The Human Body / How Many Bones Are In The Human Body?. U·X·L Science Fact Finder. eNotes.com, Inc.. URL accessed on 2009-01-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Gary, Farr The Musculoskeletal System. URL accessed on 2008-11-18.
  5. Skeletal System. URL accessed on 2009-01-08.
  6. Mooar, Pekka Muscles. The Merck Manuals Online Medical Library. URL accessed on 2008-11-16.
  7. innervated. Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com, LLC.. URL accessed on 2009-01-03.
  8. Bárány, Michael SMOOTH MUSCLE. URL accessed on 2008-11-19.
  9. The Mechanism of Muscle Contraction. Principles of Meat Science (4th Edition). URL accessed on 2008-11-18.
  10. Jonathan, Cluett Tendons. URL accessed on 2008-11-19.
  11. articular. Random House Unabridged Dictionary. Random House, Inc.. URL accessed on 2008-11-15.
  12. neurologic. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company. URL accessed on 2008-11-15.
  13. Kahn, Cynthia; Scott Line (2008). Musculoskeletal System Introduction: Introduction, NJ, USA: Merck & Co., Inc..
  14. 14.0 14.1 Heiserman, David The Musculoskeletal System. SweetHaven Publishing Services. URL accessed on 2008-11-18.
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