Kinesiology 2222A/B Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Synovial Membrane, Lateral Meniscus, Cartilaginous Joint

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Audio recording started: 2:31 pm thursday, february 14, 2019. In each of these joints there"s a very characteristic amount of movement. Sutures, ligaments (dense connective tissue) - collagen lined up parallel to resist separational forces in a particular direction. There"s a ligament that holds the tooth in place called the paradental ligament (no joint cavity just dense connective tissue holding things together. Example where you have hyaline cartilage attaches two bones together - Synchondrosis (condro being hyaline) - directly attached hyaline. On the surface with a disk in between. Most joints are synovial joints - our skeleton is meant to move. Disks present on with on the surface have hyaline cartilage. Major synovial joints (often injured, bare lots of weight and have lots of movement) Joint cavity is the space that holds the fluid in-between the bones that are articulating. Sack of fluid made of dense irregular tissue.

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