enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Intramembranous ossification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intramembranous_ossification

    The following bones develop in humans via Intramembranous ossification: [3] Flat bones of the face; Most of the bones of the skull; Clavicles; Other bone that formed by intramembranous ossification are: cortices of tubular and flat bones as well as the calvaria, upper facial bones, tympanic temporal bone, vomer, and medial pterygoid process. [4]

  3. Ossification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ossification

    Diagram showing stages of endochondral ossification. Endochondral ossification is the formation of long bones and other bones. This requires a hyaline cartilage precursor. There are two centers of ossification for endochondral ossification. The primary center. In long bones, bone tissue first appears in the diaphysis (middle of shaft).

  4. Development of joints - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_of_joints

    The bones that form the base and facial regions of the skull develop through the process of endochondral ossification. In this process, mesenchyme accumulates and differentiates into hyaline cartilage, which forms a model of the future bone. The hyaline cartilage model is then gradually, over a period of many years, displaced by bone.

  5. Bone healing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_healing

    Intramembranous ossification, mediated by the periosteal layer of bone, occurs with the formation of callus. For endochondral ossification, deposition of bone only occurs after the mineralised cartilage. [citation needed] This process of healing occurs when the fracture is treated conservatively using orthopaedic cast or immobilisation ...

  6. Bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone

    Endochondral ossification Light micrograph of a section through a juvenile knee joint (rat) showing the cartilagineous growth plates. The formation of bone is called ossification. During the fetal stage of development this occurs by two processes: intramembranous ossification and endochondral ossification. [42]

  7. Flat bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_bone

    Ossification is started by the formation of layers of undifferentiated connective tissue that hold the area where the flat bone is to come. On a baby, those spots are known as fontanelles . The fontanelles contain connective tissue stem cells , which form into osteoblasts , which secrete calcium phosphate into a matrix of canals.

  8. Ossification center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ossification_center

    A primary ossification center is the first area of a bone to start ossifying. It usually appears during prenatal development in the central part of each developing bone. In long bones the primary centers occur in the diaphysis/shaft and in irregular bones the primary centers occur usually in the body of the bone. Most bones have only one ...

  9. Dermal bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dermal_bone

    A dermal bone or investing bone or membrane bone is a bony structure derived from intramembranous ossification forming components of the vertebrate skeleton, including much of the skull, jaws, gill covers, shoulder girdle, fin rays (lepidotrichia), and the shells of turtles and armadillos.