Anatomy
& Physiology
Summer 06 Assignment #2
Skeletal System
Instructions
Please read each section/question carefully. Answer questions in
complete
sentences, and cite all outside materials using footnotes. All
work is to
be typed, and may be submitted either by email or in class. This
assignment is due no later than midnight Thursday July 20th. NO
LATE
PAPERS ACCEPTED.
Short Answer:
Case Study
A
One of the defensive tackles was slow to get up
after a collision.
The athletic trainer noticed a protrusion of several ribs on the left,
medial
aspect of his lower anterior chest.
Q1: what specific part of the thoracic cage has been injured?
The coach
orders the trainer to ‘wrap’ him up and
send him back out to the field. The trainer doesn’t think this is a
good idea.
Q2: How should he explain potential ramifications of this? [hint – what
secondary injuries could occur if the player is hit again]
Q3: Knowing what part of the skeleton is damaged, would you think this
area
would heal quickly or slowly? Explain.
Case Study B
A patient is
unconscious. Radiographic films
reveal that the superior articulating process of the atlas has been
fractured.
Q1: What structure does this articulating process normally link to?
Q2: Which of the following could have produced this condition: falling
on the
top of the head or being hit in the jaw with an uppercut? Explain.
Case Study C
A physician
glances into his waiting room and
notices three women. Miss M is 25 yrs old and is sitting erect in a
chair,
clutching her hands, with severely deformed fingers and wrists, in her
lap.
Mrs. T, age 83,is frail and is noticeably hunched in her chair, the
result of
an excessive vertebral curvature in her thoracic region. Mrs. W is 52
yrs old,
and is slowly rubbing her slightly enlarged knees.
Q1: Without glancing at their files, how might the physician remember
which
patient has osteoporosis, which has rheumatoid arthritis and which is
coping
with osteoarthritis?
Q2: Discuss how rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis are different
in their
etiology.
Case Study D
Ms. N has given
birth to a 7 lb 3 oz little
boy. After the initial joy of the
experience
waned, the attending physician came to speak to her, it seems her son
has a
cleft palate.
Q1: what bones
failed to unite embryologically to
cause this?
Q2: The doctor
will suggest a procedure to correct
it, when is this procedure usually performed for maximal benefit?
Case Study E
Jimmy has been
in an auto accident. He can’t open
his mouth, and has been told that he suffers from the following: black
eye,
broken nose, broken cheek, broken upper jaw, damaged eye socket and
punctured
lung.
Q1: Describe exactly
what structures that
have been damaged as a result of this accident.
Case Study F
Kate loves
pretending she is a human cannonball.
As she jumps off the diving board, she assumes the proper position
before she
pounds into the water: head and thighs tucked against her chest; back
rounded;
arms pressed against her sides while
her forearms, crossed in front of her shins, hold her legs tightly
folded
against her chest.
Q1: Use the proper anatomical terms to describe the position of Kate’s back, head and limbs.