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  2. Human musculoskeletal system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_musculoskeletal_system

    A tendon is a tough, flexible band of fibrous connective tissue that connects muscles to bones. [12] The extra-cellular connective tissue between muscle fibers binds to tendons at the distal and proximal ends, and the tendon binds to the periosteum of individual bones at the muscle's origin and insertion. As muscles contract, tendons transmit ...

  3. Dense regular connective tissue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dense_regular_connective...

    An example of their use is in tendons, [3] which connect muscle to bone and derive their strength from the regular, longitudinal arrangement of bundles of collagen fibers. Ligaments bind bone to bone and are similar in structure to tendons. [4]

  4. Bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone

    The matrix is hardened by the binding of inorganic mineral salt, calcium phosphate, in a chemical arrangement known as bone mineral, a form of calcium apatite. [8] [9] It is the mineralization that gives bones rigidity. Bone is actively constructed and remodeled throughout life by specialized bone cells known as osteoblasts and osteoclasts.

  5. Dense connective tissue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dense_connective_tissue

    Crowded between the collagen fibers are rows of fibroblasts, fiber-forming cells, that generate the fibers. Dense connective tissue forms strong, rope-like structures such as tendons and ligaments. Tendons attach skeletal muscles to bones; ligaments connect bones to bones at joints.

  6. Skeletal muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skeletal_muscle

    At the muscle-tendon interface, force is transmitted from the sarcomeres in the muscle cells to the tendon. [5] Muscles and tendons develop in close association, and after their joining at the myotendinous junction they constitute a dynamic unit for the transmission of force from muscle contraction to the skeletal system. [27]

  7. Connective tissue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connective_tissue

    Various types of specialized tissues and cells are classified under the spectrum of connective tissue, and are as diverse as brown and white adipose tissue, blood, cartilage and bone. [23]: 158 Cells of the immune system—such as macrophages, mast cells, plasma cells, and eosinophils—are found scattered in loose connective tissue, providing ...

  8. Ligament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligament

    Ligaments are similar to tendons and fasciae as they are all made of connective tissue. [2] The differences among them are in the connections that they make: ligaments connect one bone to another bone, tendons connect muscle to bone, and fasciae connect muscles to other muscles. These are all found in the skeletal system of the human body.

  9. Enthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enthesis

    Thus the words (enthesis and insertion [of muscle]) are proximal in the semantic field, but insertion in reference to muscle can refer to any relevant aspect of the site (i.e., the attachment per se, the bone, the tendon, or the entire area), whereas enthesis refers to the attachment per se and to ligamentous attachments as well as tendinous ones.