Examples of intramembranous ossification in the following topics:
-
- During fetal development, bone tissue is created through intramembranous ossification and endochondral ossification.
- The skull and vertebral column are produced by intramembranous ossification.
- Intramembranous ossification is one of the two essential processes during fetal development of the mammalian skeletal system.
- Unlike the other process of bone creation— endochondral ossification—intramembranous ossification does not involve cartilage.
- Unlike intramembranous ossification, cartilage is present during endochondral ossification.
-
- The formation of bone during the fetal stage of development occurs by two processes: intramembranous ossification and endochondral ossification.
- Intramembranous ossification mainly occurs during the formation of the flat bones of the skull, as well as the mandible, maxilla, and clavicles.
- The steps in intramembranous ossification are:
- Endochondral ossification begins with points in the cartilage called "primary ossification centers."
- They mostly appear during fetal development, though a few short bones begin their primary ossification after birth.
-
- Early in gestation, a fetus has a cartilaginous skeleton that becomes bone in the gradual process of endochondral ossification.
- Early in gestation, a fetus has a cartilaginous skeleton from which the long bones and most other bones gradually form throughout development and for years after birth in a process called endochondral ossification.
- Intramembranous ossification is the direct laying of bone into the primitive connective tissue (mesenchyme).
- Endochondral ossification involves cartilage as a precursor.
- Chondrocytes in the primary center of ossification begin to grow (hypertrophy).
-
- The ossification of the bones of the skull causes the fontanelles to close over a period of 18 to 24 months; they eventually form the sutures of the neurocranium.
- This is called intramembranous ossification.
-
- Secondary ossification occurs after birth at the epiphyses of long bones and continues until skeletal maturity.
- Secondary ossification occurs after birth.
- 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 a new bone matrix.
- Zone of bone deposition (ossification): The walls between the lacunae break down and the chondrocytes die.
- Differentiate among the zones of development from cartilage to bone in postnatal ossification
-
- As such, the degree of ossification can be a useful tool in determining age postmortem.
-
- Except for the mandible, all are joined together by sutures, semi-rigid articulations formed by bony ossification.
-
- Depletion of chondrocytes due to apoptosis leads to less ossification, and growth slows down and later stops when the cartilage has been completely replaced by bone.
-
- This
temporary cartilage is gradually replaced by bone (endochondral ossification),
a process that ends at puberty.
-
- The replacement process is known as endochondral ossification with respect to the hyaline cartilage and bony substitution with respect to the woven bone.