tendon
(noun)
A tough band of inelastic fibrous tissue that connects a muscle with its bony attachment.
(noun)
A tough band of fibrous tissue that usually connects a muscle with a bone.
Examples of tendon in the following topics:
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Muscle Attachment Sites
- Tendons are composed of connective tissue that attaches muscle to bone.
- Tendons were once thought to play only a passive connective role.
- Not all muscle attaches via tendons.
- It is the thickest and strongest tendon in the body.
- Tendons are a common tissue that connect muscle to bone.
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Bursae and Tendon Sheaths
- Joints are cushioned by small fluid-filled sacs called bursae and stabilized by tough bands of fibrous connective tissue called tendons.
- Synovial tendon sheaths line tendons only where they pass through narrow passages or retinacula, as in the palm, at the wrist, and around the ankle.
- Elsewhere, the tendon lies in a bed of loose fibrous tissue.
- Tendons connect muscle to bone and move the bones or structures to which they are attached.
- It provides a cushion between bones and tendons or muscles around a joint.
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Stability and Range of Motion at Synovial Joints
- A tendon is a mechanism by which muscles connect to bone and that transmits force.
- It also allows tendons to store and recover energy with high efficiency.
- During a human stride, the Achilles (calcaneal) tendon stretches as the ankle joint undergoes dorsiflexion.
- Disuse, causing decrease in synovial fluid, flexibility of ligaments and tendons, and muscle atrophy
- The Achilles tendon, also called the calcaneus, provides stability and limits the range of motion at the ankle joint.
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Tenosynovitis
- Tenosynovitis is the inflammation of the fluid-filled sheath (called the synovium) that surrounds a tendon.
- Tenosynovitis is the inflammation of the fluid-filled sheath (called the synovium) that surrounds a tendon.
- This condition often presents with comorbid tendinitis, which is the inflammation of the actual tendon itself.
- Resting the affected tendons is essential for recovery; a brace is often recommended.
- The sprained tendon or limb is splinted for a week or so.
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Spinal Reflexes
- The Golgi tendon reflex is a normal component of the reflex arc of the peripheral nervous system.
- The tendon reflex operates as a feedback mechanism to control muscle tension by causing muscle relaxation before muscle force becomes so great that tendons might be torn.
- Like the stretch reflex, the tendon reflex is ipsilateral.
- The sensory receptors for this reflex are called tendon Golgi receptors, which lie within a tendon near its junction with a muscle.
- The Golgi tendon organ, responsible for the Golgi tendon reflex, is diagrammed with its typical position in a muscle (left), neuronal connections in spinal cord (middle), and expanded schematic (right).
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Proprioceptive Sensations
- The Golgi organ (also called Golgi tendon organ, tendon organ, neurotendinous organ or neurotendinous spindle) is a proprioceptive sensory receptor organ that is located at the insertion of skeletal muscle fibers onto the tendons of skeletal muscle.
- It provides the sensory component of the Golgi tendon reflex.
- The Golgi tendon reflex is a normal component of the reflex arc of the peripheral nervous system.
- In a Golgi tendon reflex, skeletal muscle contraction causes the agonist muscle to simultaneously lengthen and relax.
- The Golgi tendon organ contributes to the Golgie tendon reflex and provides proprioceptive information about joint position.
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How Skeletal Muscles Are Named
- These muscles do not tend to exert as much force on their tendons.
- Because the fascicles pull on the tendons at an angle, they do not move the tendon as far as their parallel muscle counterparts.
- In Pennate muscles, the tendon runs through the length of the muscle.
- If the fascicles lie to either side of the tendon the muscle is called bipennate.
- If the central tendon branches within a pennate muscle, the muscle is called multipennate.
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Knee Injuries
- Tendons usually attach muscle to bone.
- In the knee the quadriceps and patellar tendon can sometimes tear.
- The injuries to these tendons occur when there is forceful contraction of the knee.
- If the tendon is completely torn, bending or extending the leg is impossible.
- A completely torn tendon requires surgery, but a partially torn tendon can be treated with leg immobilization followed by physical therapy.
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Bursitis
- Bursitis, the inflammation of bursae (small sacs) of synovial fluid, impedes the movement of muscles and tendons over joint bones.
- The bursae rest at the points where muscles and tendons slide across bone.
- Moreover, movement of tendons and muscles over the inflamed bursa aggravate inflammation, perpetuating the problem.
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Patella (The Knee)
- To enhance the leverage that the quadriceps tendon can exert on the femur, thereby increasing muscle efficiency.
- The base of the patella faces superiorly and is the attachment point for the quadriceps tendon.