This process forms, renews, and repairs bone.
What is ossification?
This joint allows movement in all directions; a hip joint is an example.
What is a ball-and-socket joint?
This type of muscle forms the wall of the heart.
What is cardiac muscle?
These two organs make up the central nervous system.
What are the brain and spinal cord?
A band of fibrous, slightly elastic connective tissue that attaches one bone to another.
What is a ligament?
A disease that causes progressive loss of bone tissue and makes bones brittle.
What is osteoporosis?
A hinge joint allows this kind of movement; give an example.
What is flexion and extension / ex: elbow/knee?
This is a fibrous cord that attaches muscle to bone.
What is a tendon?
This part of the brain coordinates the movement of skeletal muscles.
What is the cerebellum?
The muscle that closes a joint.
What is a flexor?
Bone starts in the embryo as.
What is cartilage?
This joint allows limited rotation; an example is between two vertebrae.
What is a pivot joint?
The inflammation of a tendon is called this.
What is tendonitis?
The largest and most complex part of the brain.
What is the cerebrum?
The muscle that opens a joint.
What is an extensor?
Name one way a person can reduce the risk of developing osteoporosis.
What is weight-bearing exercise / adequate calcium and vitamin D / healthy diet / avoid smoking?
This joint allows many movements except rotation; an example is the wrist.
What is an ellipsoidal joint?
When muscles are stretched or partially torn from overexertion, this occurs.
What is a sprain?
Messages from sensory receptors travel to the CNS through these neurons.
What are sensory neurons?
A nerve cell.
What is a neuron?
The ankle bones are categorized as this type
What are short bones?
List the four types of joints
What are ball-and-socket, hinge, pivot, and ellipsoidal?
Muscular dystrophy is described as this.
What is an inherited disorder?
Describe the path of a nerve impulse from sensory receptor stimulation to muscle movement
What is: receptor → sensory neuron → central nervous system → motor neuron → muscle?
The fibrous tissue that cushions between bones
What is cartilage?