Functions of the Periosteum.
The periosteum defends the bones which it covers from the impression of the moveable parts that surround it, from that of the muscles, of the arteries, whose pulsation would wear them, as happens in certain aneurismal tumours near the sternum, the vertebræ, &c.
It is a kind of parenchyma of nutrition in reserve, if I may so express myself, always ready to receive the phosphate of lime, when it cannot be carried upon the bone that has become diseased; hence natural and artificial necroses which never take place in the teeth, from the want of this membrane. These little bones have caries and various alterations, but not true necrosis.
We cannot doubt that the internal laminæ of the periosteum are successively ossified, and thus contribute not a little to increase the bone in thickness, when its increase in length is finished. I would observe upon this subject, that not only it, but all the fibrous system, has a singular affinity with the phosphate of lime. Next to the cartilaginous system, it has the greatest tendency to be encrusted with it, no doubt because its kind of general vitality, of organic sensibility in particular, has much analogy with that of the bones. Where the tendons in sliding upon the bones experience great friction they become osseous. The dura-mater and the tunica albuginea are very often ossified; the sclerotica serves as a parenchyma for much earthy substance in birds, which in consequence have it extremely hard.
The periosteum has no connexion with the formation of the bones; it is only accessory to that of the callus; it is a kind of limit which circumscribes within its natural bounds the progress of ossification, and keeps it from irregular aberrations. Does it prepare the blood which serves to nourish the bones? This question cannot be settled by any experiment; but we are sure that the vital properties which it enjoys, do not enable it to accelerate the circulation of the blood arriving at the bones, as some authors have thought.
It seems to me moreover that they have described the periosteum too exclusively in relation to the bones; no doubt it is necessary to these organs; but perhaps it performs in relation to the fibrous organs a still more important part. If nature has placed it everywhere on the osseous system, it is probably in great part, as I have said, because it finds in this system a general, solid and resisting support, which enables it to resist the various drawings, that the whole fibrous system makes upon it, drawings which are sometimes communicated to this last system. This is a new point of view in which the periosteum should be described, and it will yield much more to general considerations, than that in which Duhamel, Fougeroux, &c. have considered this membrane.
IV. Perichondrium.
We find on all the non-articular cartilages a membrane exactly analogous to the periosteum, and which is called perichondrium. The larynx, the ribs, &c. exhibit it in a very evident manner; it is delicate, with fibres interlaced in all directions, less closely united to the organs it covers, than the periosteum is to the bones, because the cartilages having on their surface less numerous foramina, it does not send to them as many fibrous elongations; hence a less intimate relation between the life of the perichondrium and that of the cartilage, than between that of the bone and its periosteum.
I have twice in a young dog removed from the thyroid its external membrane, and closed the wound immediately, which has been cured without apparent alteration in the organization of the cartilage; at least it has continued to perform its functions. The same experiment might easily be made on the cartilages of the ribs; I have not attempted it. The perichondrium has appeared to me in many injections to contain fewer blood vessels than the periosteum; its uses are analogous to those of this last membrane.