Definition of Joint
Joint: A joint is the area where two bones are
attached for the purpose of motion of body parts. A joint is usually
formed of fibrous connective tissue and cartilage. An articulation or
an arthrosis is the same as a joint.
Joints are grouped according to their motion: a ball and socket
joint; a hinge joint; a condyloid joint (a joint that permits all
forms of angular movement except axial rotation); a pivot joint;
gliding joint; and a saddle joint.
Joints can move in four and only four ways:
- Gliding -- one bony surface glides on another without
angular or rotatory movement;
- Angular -- occurs only between long bones, increasing or
decreasing the angle between the bones;
- Circumduction -- occurs in joints composed of the head of
a bone and an articular cavity, the long bone describing a series of
circles, the whole forming a cone; and
- Rotation -- a bone moves about a central axis without
moving from this axis.
The word "joint" comes from the Latin "junctio" meaning a joining
(as in a junction).
Last Editorial Review: 3/26/1998 2:26:00 PM
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