periosteum
(noun)
A membrane that covers the outer surface of all bones.
Examples of periosteum in the following topics:
-
Bone Repair
- Bone fractures are repaired through physiological processes in the periosteum via chrondroblasts and osteoblasts.
- The healing process is mainly determined by the periosteum (the connective tissue membrane covering the bone).
- The periosteum is one source of precursor cells that develop into the chondroblasts and osteoblasts that are essential to heal bone.
- Days after a fracture, the cells of the periosteum replicate and transform.
-
Embryonic and Fetal Bone Formation
- The periosteum is formed and bone growth continues at the surface of trabeculae.
- The primary center of ossification is the area where bone growth occurs between the periosteum and the bone.
- The perichondrium becomes the periosteum.
- The periosteum contains a layer of undifferentiated cells (osteoprogenitor cells) that later become osteoblasts.
-
Supply of Blood and Nerves to Bone
- Volkmann's canals are channels that assist with blood and nerve supply from the periosteum to the Haversian canal.
- Young periosteum is more vascular, has more metaphyseal branches, and its vessels communicate more freely with those of the shaft than adult periosteum .
-
Development of the Skeleton
- The membrane that occupies the place of the future bone resembles connective tissue and ultimately forms the periosteum; it is composed of fibers and granular cells in a matrix.
- These layers subsequently encroach upon the mesh, under the periosteum, and around the larger vascular channels that become the Haversian canals, thickening and developing the bones.
- The perichondrium becomes the periosteum, which contains a layer of undifferentiated cells (osteoprogenitor cells) that later become osteoblasts.
-
Branches of Spinal Nerves
- The meningeal branches (recurrent meningeal or sinuvertebral nerves): These branch from the spinal nerve and re-enter the intervertebral foramen to serve the ligaments, dura, blood vessels, intervertebral discs, facet joints, and periosteum of the vertebrae.
-
Cartilaginous Joints: Synchodroses
- Section through occipitosphenoid synchondrosis of an infant, including the cartilage, perichrondrium, and periosteum.
-
Muscle Attachment Sites
- At either end of the tendon, its fibers intertwine with the fascia of a muscle or the periosteum (a dense fibrous covering of a bone), allowing force to be dissipated across the bone or muscle.
-
Structural Classification of Joints
- A synovial joint connects bones with a fibrous joint capsule that is continuous with the bones’ periosteum.
-
Postnatal Bone Growth
- The growth in the diameter of bones around the diaphysis occurs through the deposition of bone beneath the periosteum.
-
Stages of Bone Development