Examples of flat bones in the following topics:
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- All the bones in the body can be described as long bones or flat bones.
- Cortical bone
is compact bone, while cancellous bone is trabecular and spongy bone.
- Flat bones are broad bones that provide protection or muscle attachment.
- These bones are expanded into broad, flat plates, as in the cranium (skull), ilium (pelvis), sternum, rib cage, sacrum, and scapula.
- The flat bones are as follows:
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- The scapula, or shoulder bone, is a flat, triangular bone that connects to the humerus and the clavicle.
- The scapula, or shoulder blade, is a flat,
triangular bone located to the posterior of the shoulder.
- Due to its flat nature, the scapula presents
two surfaces and three borders; the front-facing costal surface and the rear-facing dorsal surface, as well as the superior, lateral, and medial borders.
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- Intramembranous ossification mainly occurs during the formation of the flat bones of the skull, but also the mandible, maxilla, and clavicles; the bone is formed from connective tissue such as mesenchyme tissue rather than from cartilage.
- They are responsible for the formation of the diaphyses of long bones, short bones, and certain parts of irregular bones.
- Secondary ossification occurs after birth, and forms the epiphyses of long bones and the extremities of irregular and flat bones.
- The bone remodeling period refers to the average total duration of a single cycle of bone remodeling at any point on a bone surface.
- Bone tissue is removed by osteoclasts, and then new bone tissue is formed by osteoblasts.
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- Humans are born with between 300 and 350 bones.
- However, many bones fuse together between birth and maturity.
- While some consider certain structures to be a single bone with multiple parts, others may see it as a single part with multiple bones.
- There are five general classifications of bones.
- These are long bones, short bones, flat bones, irregular bones, and sesamoid bones.
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- The pubis is the lowest and most anterior portion of the hip bones of the pelvis.
- The pubic bone articulates with the ilium and the ischium on each hip.
- The body of the pubis is a wide, strong, medial, and flat portion of the pubic bone that unites with the pubic symphisis.
- The superior pubic ramus is one third of the pubic bone.
- The inferior pubic ramus is a thin and flat bone that makes up one third of the pubis.
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- It forms the epiphyses of long bones and the extremities of irregular and flat bones.
- During postnatal bone formation, endochondral ossification initiates bone deposition by first generating a structural framework at the ends of long bones, within which the osteoblasts can synthesize new bone matrix.
- The growth in the diameter of bones around the diaphysis occurs through the deposition of bone beneath the periosteum.
- The epiphysis is the rounded end of a long bone located at its joint with adjacent bone(s).
- Newly formed bonee.
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- It is synonymous with bone tissue formation.
- This is how the flat bones of the skull and the clavicles are formed.
- This serves as support for the new bone.
- This creates cavities within the bone.
- Osteoclasts, formed from macrophages, break down spongy bone to form the medullary (bone marrow) cavity.
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- The sternum or breastbone is a long, flat, bony plate connected to the rib bones via cartilage that forms the anterior section of the rib cage.
- The sternum, or breastbone, is a
long, flat, bony plate that forms the most anterior section of the ribcage.
- The
sternum is highly vascular in nature and covered with a thin layer of compact
bone providing a degree of flexibility.
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- The neurocranium is comprised of eight bones: occipital, two temporal bones, two parietal bones, sphenoid, ethmoid, and the frontal bone.
- The neurocranium consists
of the occipital bone, two temporal bones, two parietal bones, the sphenoid,
ethmoid, and frontal bones—all are joined together with sutures.
- The squamosal suture separates the parietal bone and
squama portion of temporal bone.
- Squamous: This part is large and flat and forms the main region of the forehead.
- The frontal bone borders two other
neurocranial bones—the parietal bones through the coronal sutures and the
sphenoid bone through the sphenofrontal suture.
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- In patients with suspected peripheral blood or bone marrow diseases, a bone marrow biopsy can isolate bone marrow for an examination.
- Bone marrow examination is the pathologic analysis of samples of bone marrow obtained by bone marrow biopsy and bone marrow aspiration.
- This is the purpose of bone marrow aspiration and biopsy.
- After the procedure is complete, the patient is typically asked to lie flat for five to ten minutes to provide pressure over the procedure site.
- A bone marrow biopsy procedure consists of inserting a large-gauge syringe into an area of the hip and extracting the bone marrow.