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Structural Class: Fibrous Joints definitions
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Fibrous Joints
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Fibrous Joints
Joints bound by collagen fibers of dense connective tissue, providing stability with limited movement.
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Terms in this set (15)
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Fibrous Joints
Joints bound by collagen fibers of dense connective tissue, providing stability with limited movement.
Collagen Fibers
Protein fibers providing strength and stability to fibrous joints, limiting their movement.
Dense Irregular Connective Tissue
Tissue with densely packed fibers in random arrangement, resisting forces in multiple directions.
Synarthroses
Immovable joints allowing no movement, providing structural stability.
Amphiarthroses
Joints allowing slight movement, providing a balance between stability and mobility.
Sutures
Fibrous joints in the skull, providing stability with no movement, may ossify into synostosis.
Synostosis
Fusion of bones into a single bone, resulting in a bony joint with no movement.
Gomphoses
Fibrous joints anchoring teeth to bony sockets, allowing subtle movement under chewing forces.
Periodontal Ligament
Dense connective tissue gluing teeth to their sockets, allowing resistance to multidirectional forces.
Syndesmoses
Fibrous joints connecting bones via ligaments, allowing more mobility than sutures and gomphoses.
Interosseous Membranes
Broad sheets of dense connective tissue between bones, allowing varying degrees of movement.
Tibia
The larger and stronger of the two bones in the lower leg, connected to the fibula by syndesmoses.
Fibula
The smaller bone in the lower leg, connected to the tibia by syndesmoses.
Radius
One of the two bones in the forearm, connected to the ulna by interosseous membranes.
Ulna
One of the two bones in the forearm, connected to the radius by interosseous membranes.