What did William Hunter know about bone?
- PMID: 15768416
- DOI: 10.1002/ca.20078
What did William Hunter know about bone?
Abstract
This article examines William Hunter's specimens on bone in the Anatomy Museum at the University of Glasgow. By referring to students' notes taken at Hunter's lectures and to the Manuscript Catalogue of his anatomical specimens, we attempt to answer the question, "What did William Hunter know about bone?" Hunter seems to have been particularly interested in the relationship between vascularisation and ossification and many of the specimens illustrate this. He provided his students with reasoned arguments on a number of issues: that the marrow serves as a fat store and not to produce synovial fluid or to keep bones supple; the periosteum serves as an attachment for tendons and ligaments; the rationale for the presence of epiphyses is not readily defined; that bones form by intramembranous and endochondral ossification and that, in the latter, cartilage is replaced by bone. William Hunter narrowly failed to realise that in long bones new bone is laid down by the periosteum and at the epiphysial plates, and is remodeled. These discoveries were to be made by his brother, John.
(c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Similar articles
-
William Hunter's Gravid Uterus: the specimens and plates.Clin Anat. 2002 Jun;15(4):253-62. doi: 10.1002/ca.10074. Clin Anat. 2002. PMID: 12112351
-
Modern day relevance of William Hunter's approach to teaching "The organ of hearing".Clin Anat. 2013 Jul;26(5):551-5. doi: 10.1002/ca.22220. Epub 2013 Feb 13. Clin Anat. 2013. PMID: 23408375
-
Matthew baillie's specimens and engravings.Clin Anat. 2018 Jul;31(5):622-631. doi: 10.1002/ca.22979. Epub 2017 Sep 25. Clin Anat. 2018. PMID: 28815746
-
Merging the old skeletal biology with the new. I. Intramembranous ossification, endochondral ossification, ectopic bone, secondary cartilage, and pathologic considerations.J Craniofac Genet Dev Biol. 2000 Apr-Jun;20(2):84-93. J Craniofac Genet Dev Biol. 2000. PMID: 11100738 Review.
-
[ON THE OSSIFICATION PROCESS IN EPI-METAPHYSES WITH REFERENCE TO THE DUALISTIC PRINCIPLE OF OSTEOGENESIS. WITH CONTRIBUTIONS TO GROWTH LINES, GROWTH ZONES AND EPI-METAPHYSIAL TRANSFORMATION AREAS].Z Orthop Ihre Grenzgeb. 1963 Dec;98:14-42. Z Orthop Ihre Grenzgeb. 1963. PMID: 14113423 Review. German. No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Personal name as subject
- Actions
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources