How Bone is Formed in Humans - Douglas' Questions

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Bone formation, or osteogenesis, occurs through two primary processes: intramembranous ossification and endochondral ossification. Intramembranous ossification transforms mesenchymal connective tissue directly into bone without a cartilage model, primarily forming flat and irregular bones. In contrast, endochondral ossification involves replacing hyaline cartilage with bone tissue, serving as the main method of bone formation. This process includes several stages: the perichondrium becomes vascularized and transforms into periosteum, a compact bone collar forms around the cartilage, and the cartilage center is converted into spongy bone. Key zones develop during this transformation, including the zones of reserve cartilage, proliferation, hypertrophy, cell death, and provisional calcification. Understanding these stages is crucial for grasping how bones develop in the human body.
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I am a colege student, we are going to have a test after holidays, i am worried because I still don't know a lot of things. Could you tell me how bone is created in human ?
I know there are tow stages bone is formed: membrane, and endochondrea.
I am still stuck at how to say these two stages in a more particualar way. I haven't found any source s so far on teh internet.
Thank you.

-Douglas
 
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bone formation

A quick search on Google for "bone formation" would have given you most of what you are looking for. The gist of it is that bone formation (or osteogenesis) occurs in two main processes:

Intramembranous Ossification involves the transformation of mesenchymal connective tissue into bone; no cartilage model is required. This process occurs in the development of flat bones and other irregular bones. Basically, osteoblasts migrate to the connective tissue and surround themselves with bone matrix that they secrete.

Endochondral Ossification which is the main process of bone formation, involves the sequential replacement of hyaline cartilage with bony tissue. Most people refer the hyaline cartilage in this process as a "cartilage model" for bone formation. The perichondrium of the hyaline cartilage becomes infiltrated with blood vessels and osteoblasts which transform the perichondrium into a periosteum. A compact bone collar is formed by osteoblasts surrounding the cartilage, and the cartilage in the center also becomes transformed into spongy bone, where the cells die and the extracellular matrix becomes calcified. There are a few zones that are created when the cartilage becomes spongy bone: zone of reserve cartilage, zone of proliferation (where the chondrocytes undergo rapid cell division), zone of hypertrophy (where the cells swell up), zone of cell death, and the zone of provisional calcification (where the matrix becomes calcified).
 
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