Bone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bones are rigid organs that form part of the endoskeleton of vertebrates. They function to move, support, and protect the various organs of the body, produce red and white blood cells and store miner...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone
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The organic matrix is composed of type I collagen fibers (about 95%) embedded in an amorphous ground substance consisting of: ... Most bone tissue is lamellar bone in which the tissue is well organized and regular. The lacunae (of osteocytes) are regularly arranged as are the collagen fibers of the matrix.
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www.technion.ac.il/~mdcourse/274203/lect5.html
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ZOOL. 251 EXAM QUESTIONS - BONE TISSUE AND SKELETAL SYSTEM ... The type of bone that is adapted to withstand stresses that arrive from mainly one direction. ... a type of cell that exists within the lacunae to help maintain healthy bone tissue within an osteon.
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www.utm.edu/staff/amills/bones.htm
www.utm.edu/staff/amills/bones.htm
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In this type of bone parallel lamellae form struts and thin branching plates called trabeculae. The trabeculae surround spaces that contain bone marrow. Bone marrow is loose connective tissue that is dominated either by adipocytes (yellow marrow) or hemopoietic tissue (red marrow).
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virtual.yosemite.cc.ca.us/rdroual/Lecture%20Notes/Unit%...
virtual.yosemite.cc.ca.us/rdroual/Lecture%20Notes/Unit%202/bone_tissue.htm
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The Mechanics of Bone Tissue Part I;; by Jacob Wilson ... § The answer is shear genius. In each circular layer or lamella lies several small spaces( cavities ), almost like rooms carved out in a home. Think of them as living quarters for bone cells. Each space is called a lacuna( pleural is lacunae ).
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www.abcbodybuilding.com/magazine03/bonemechanics1.htm
www.abcbodybuilding.com/magazine03/bonemechanics1.htm
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Cartilage and bone are considered connective tissues. ... These micrographs are of intervertebral disc tissue. At the left fibrocartilage is found in the area between the parallel lines. This cartilage type is recognized by chondrocytes (A) oriented in rows. Even when the tissue is highly magnified (as at the right), the lacunae,
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www.unomaha.edu/hpa/2740cartilagebone.html
www.unomaha.edu/hpa/2740cartilagebone.html
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The first job - best done at low magnification - is to find the developing bone. It should look like a coarse meshwork (trabecular bone) of pink tissue surrounding patches of much lighter or unstained tissue. Lamellae are not visible (woven bone) and the lacunae are larger than lacunae in mature bone.
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www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/CorePages/Bone/Bone.htm
www.lab.anhb.uwa.edu.au/mb140/CorePages/Bone/Bone.htm
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1. Which of the following can be found in cartilage but not bone tissue: a. lacunae b. protein fibers c. blood vessels d. chondroitin ; 2. The most common type of exocrine gland is this type: a. apocrine b. merocrine c. endocrine d. holocrine ;
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www.rogers.k12.ar.us/users/ehutches/anatomytissuequesti...
www.rogers.k12.ar.us/users/ehutches/anatomytissuequestions.html
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• Bones and bone tissue ... • cells in lacunae connected by gap junctions inside canaliculi • signal osteoclasts and osteoblasts about mechanical stresses...
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webhome.broward.edu/~jconrad/1085%20outlines/saladincha...
webhome.broward.edu/~jconrad/1085%20outlines/saladinchap7outline.htm
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