ARTICLE FIRST.
Of the Forms of the Osseous System.
Considered in relation to their forms, the bones are of three sorts, long, flat and short. One dimension predominates in the first, viz. length; two are in nearly equal proportions in the second, length and breadth; these two last dimensions, with thickness especially added, characterize the short bones. Let us examine each in a general manner.
I. Of the Long Bones.
The long bones belong in general to the apparatus of locomotion, in which they form a kind of levers that the muscles move in different directions. All are placed in the extremities, in which their whole forms a kind of central column, moveable in different directions. We see them successively diminishing in length and increasing in number, when examined from the superior to the inferior part, from the thigh or the humerus to the phalanges of the toes or the fingers. It follows from this double opposite arrangement, that the top of the limbs is characterized by the extent of its motions, and the bottom by the multiplicity, variety and narrow limits of these motions.
These bones have all an analogous conformation; thick and large at their extremities, they are more slender and usually rounded in the middle or body, as anatomists call it.
The size of the osseous extremities exhibits the double advantage, 1st, of presenting to the articulations large surfaces and consequently more causes of resistance to different displacements; 2d, of contributing to the regularity of the forms of the limb to which they belong. Observe in fact that the muscles and the bones are placed in an inverse direction in the extremities. The middle of the first, which is their largest part, corresponds to the middle of the second, which forms their small portion, whilst the extremities of these compensate by their size for the smallness of the tendons which terminate the others, and which are placed at the side of them. The increase of size of the extremities of the long bones is not sudden; it commences imperceptibly upon the body. We observe upon these different extremities eminences of articulation and of insertion.
The middle or the body has no eminence; prominent lines are seen there, always destined for aponeurotic insertions, and which, when they are very considerable take from the bone its cylindrical form, which it however preserves in the interior; thus the tibia is evidently triangular externally, though within its canal has the form of that of the femur. In general these lines of insertion, always separated by plain surfaces, are three in number upon each long bone, as we see on the humerus, the radius, the ulna, the tibia, fibula, &c. I know not the reason of this law of conformation. Another general observation is, that the body of almost all the long bones is twisted, so that the direction of its superior part is not the same as that of the inferior; by tracing from above downwards one of these lines of which I have just spoken, this may be seen; it is however more evident in the adult than in the fœtus. This change of direction has no uniformity in the course it pursues.
The internal forms of the long bones are very well seen by sawing them longitudinally. The texture of the cells fills them to the extremities; it is, as we shall see, more fine and less abundant in the middle, where the medullary canal exists.
This canal does not exist in the first month of the fœtus, nor as long as the bone is cartilaginous; the osseous state is the period of its formation. All the gelatine of the middle of the bone is then absorbed, exhalation brings no more there, except in the very delicate texture of the cells that this canal contains; this function, which is nothing in the centre, becomes more active on the circumference of the bone. This increase of activity of the external exhalants favours the formation of the compact texture, the development of which takes place precisely at the same time as that of the canal whose parietes it forms; so that at this period of ossification, exhalation and absorption appear to be in an inverse state in the two parts of the bone; one is very active on the exterior in bringing phosphate of lime, with which it encrusts the already existing parenchyma; the other is very active in the interior in removing the gelatine whose absence forms the space from which the medullary canal arises.
There is no well marked medullary cavity except in the humerus, the radius, the ulna, the femur, the tibia, the fibula and clavicle. The ribs and the phalanges, which in their forms resemble them, have much of the ordinary texture of the cells in their centre, and hardly ever any of that more delicate texture of the cells which occupies the centre of the bones above named, and which is only found in the medullary cavity.