sutures
(noun)
Fibrous joints that are only found in the cranium.
(noun)
A fairly rigid joint between bones of the neurocranium.
Examples of sutures in the following topics:
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Sutures
- A suture is a type of fibrous joint (or synarthrosis) that only occurs in the skull (or cranium).
- A suture is a type of fibrous joint (or synarthrosis) that only occurs in the skull.
- Most sutures are named for the bones that they articulate.
- Frontal suture or metopic suture: Located between the two frontal bones, prior to the fusion of the two into a single bone.
- Calculate the age of an individual skeleton based on the cranial sutures
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Sutures
- Sutures primarily visible from the side of the skull (norma lateralis) include:
- Frontal suture / Metopic suture: between the two frontal bones, prior to the fusion of the two into a single bone
- Late in life, the sagittal, coronal, and lambdoid sutures of the skull will begin to ossify and fuse, causing the suture line to gradually disappear.
- Lateral view of skull showing the location of some of the cranial sutures.
- Cranial sutures are depicted with the frontal suture highlighted in blue.
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Cranial Bones
- The occipital bone borders the parietal bones through the heavily serrated lambdoidal suture, and also the temporal bones through occipitomastoid suture.
- The two bones articulate to form the sagittal suture.
- In the front, the parietal bones form the coronal suture with the frontal bone, and in the rear, the lambdoid suture is formed by the occipital bone.
- Finally, the squamosal suture separates the parietal and temporal bones.
- 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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Structural Classification of Joints
- Sutures are the types of joint found in the cranium (skull).
- The nature of cranial sutures allows for some movement in the fetus.
- (a) Sutures (b) Syndesmosis (c) Gomphosis.
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General Features and Functions of the Skull
- The skull is formed of several bones which, with the exception of the mandible, are joined together by sutures—synarthrodial (immovable) joints.
- The neurocranium is formed from the occipital bone, two temporal bones, two parietal bones, the sphenoid, ethmoid and frontal bones; they are all joined together with sutures.
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Fontanels
- 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.
- These are joined by fibrous sutures that allow movement that facilitates childbirth and brain growth.
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Fibrous Joints
- The skull bones are connected by fibrous joints called sutures.
- Except for the mandible, all are joined together by sutures, semi-rigid articulations formed by bony ossification.
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Episiotomy
- The incision, which can be midline or at an angle from the posterior end of the vulva, is performed under local anesthetic (pudendal anesthesia), and is sutured closed after delivery.
- The cut is repaired with stitches (sutures).
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Functional Classification of Joints
- This category includes fibrous joints such as suture joints (found in the cranium) and gomphosis joints (found between teeth and sockets of the maxilla and mandible).
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Tonsillectomy
- Bleeding is stopped with electrocautery, ligation of sutures, and the topical use of thrombin, a protein that induces blood clotting.