Union of the Immoveable Articulations.

The two first orders of immoveable articulations, those with inserted surfaces and those with surfaces in juxta-position, have cartilages between the osseous surfaces, the breadth and thickness of which are found so much the greater in proportion as they are examined in subjects nearest infancy. Almost all the bones of the head are held together in this manner, which allows them to yield a little, and consequently prevents their fracture.

In the articulations of the pelvis, there are besides the cartilages, ligaments; but as these articulations perform in certain cases small sliding motions, we can consider them as intermediate between the moveable and immoveable articulations; it is on this account that they have the two kinds of organs especially destined to strengthen the articular surfaces of each of the classes, viz. the cartilages and the ligaments.

The immoveable articulations with implanted surfaces, an order which comprehends only the teeth, have nothing between the surfaces as a means of union, but a mucous membrane, the palatine. Hence why in the swellings of this membrane, in scorbutic affections, after the use of mercury, &c. the teeth become loose.

Union of the Moveable Articulations.

The moveable articulations with contiguous surfaces have the ligaments especially as a means of union, which are found in the five genera, but under different forms which will be examined hereafter. This kind of organ unites much suppleness with great resistance, a double attribute which it derives from its peculiar texture, and which renders it very proper for this function. Let us observe however that these two properties are in an inverse ratio in the two extreme ages of life, that suppleness is the companion of infancy, that stiffness and resistance are the character of the ligaments in old age. Hence in part the multiplicity of motions in one age, and their slowness and difficulty in the other.

The cartilages are not in this articular order, as in the preceding, means of union, but means of motion, by their smooth and polished surfaces.

As to the synovial membrane that is found exclusively in this order, such is its extreme tenuity, that it can hardly be considered as uniting the surfaces, and its use appears to be confined to the exhalation of synovia.

It is not the same with the muscles; they can be considered as forming at the same time around the moveable articulations, a power for the whole of the bone, and a resistance for its extremities, which they prevent from being displaced, by forming around them supports, the efficiency of which is in proportion to the efforts that are made to displace these extremities. In fact, it is in the great motions that these efforts are the most considerable; now then the neighbouring muscles of articulation strongly contracted, hard during their contractions, have a powerful tendency to prevent the osseous extremity from abandoning that which corresponds with it. In rest when the relaxed muscles offer but little resistance, the effort for support is nothing. A paralyzed limb can be luxated much more easily than another, by external violence.

The order of moveable articulations with contiguous surfaces, has as a means of union, a substance, the nature of which is between that of the ligaments and that of the cartilages.