Anatomy

Joint Types

Synovial, fibrous, cartilaginous — anatomy of where bones meet

A joint (articulation) is a junction between two or more bones. Three structural classes: fibrous (bones joined by dense connective tissue, mostly immobile — sutures of skull, syndesmoses like the distal tibiofibular joint), cartilaginous (bones joined by cartilage — hyaline at growth plates and costochondral, fibrocartilage at intervertebral discs and pubic symphysis), and synovial (free-moving, joint cavity with synovial fluid — knees, shoulders, hips). The body has ~360 joints. Synovial joints are subdivided by movement: hinge (elbow), pivot (atlantoaxial), ball-and-socket (hip, shoulder), saddle (thumb CMC), condyloid (wrist), plane (intercarpal). Joint pathology — osteoarthritis (most common, ~32 million US adults), rheumatoid arthritis, gout — ranks among top causes of disability worldwide.

  • Total joints~360 in adult human body
  • Synovial fluid pH7.4 (slightly alkaline)
  • Articular cartilage thickness1-7 mm depending on joint
  • Cartilage cell density~10⁴ chondrocytes per mm³
  • Knee synovial fluid volume~1-2 mL normally, up to 100 mL in effusion
  • OA prevalence (US)~32 million adults

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Why joint anatomy matters

  • Movement. Skeleton would be rigid without joints.
  • Load distribution. Cartilage and menisci protect bone from shock.
  • Common pathology. OA, RA, gout — leading causes of disability.
  • Surgical anatomy. Joint replacement, ligament repair, arthroscopy.
  • Imaging interpretation. X-ray, MRI, arthrocentesis distinguish causes.
  • Sports medicine. ACL, meniscus, rotator cuff injuries.
  • Aging. Joint health predicts mobility and independence.

Common misconceptions

  • All joints move. Many fibrous joints (sutures) are essentially immobile.
  • Cartilage regenerates well. Avascular — heals poorly; defects often persist.
  • OA = "wear and tear" inevitable with age. Inflammation and biology contribute; lifestyle modifies.
  • Cracking knuckles causes arthritis. No good evidence; sound is gas cavitation in synovial fluid.
  • RA only affects joints. Systemic — lung, eye, vessel, heart involvement common.
  • Gout is a "rich man's disease" of overeating. Genetics dominate uric acid handling; diet contributes modestly.

Frequently asked questions

What's a synovial joint?

Most common type — features a fluid-filled joint cavity. Articular cartilage (hyaline) covers bone ends — smooth, low-friction (coefficient of friction ~0.001-0.003, lower than ice on ice). Synovial membrane lines the cavity, secreting synovial fluid (hyaluronic acid, lubricin, water) — nourishes cartilage (which is avascular) and lubricates. Joint capsule — fibrous outer layer with ligaments. Examples: knee, hip, shoulder, elbow, ankle, fingers. Allow extensive movement.

What are fibrous joints?

Bones connected by dense fibrous tissue with no joint cavity — minimal or no movement. Sutures: skull bones (sagittal, coronal); fuse with age. Syndesmoses: bones connected by interosseous membrane (tibia-fibula, radius-ulna) — slight movement. Gomphoses: peg-in-socket (teeth in alveolar sockets via periodontal ligament). High stability where rigidity matters more than motion.

What are cartilaginous joints?

Two types. Synchondroses — hyaline cartilage; usually temporary (epiphyseal growth plates fuse after puberty); first sternocostal joint of rib 1 is a permanent synchondrosis. Symphyses — fibrocartilage; permanent, slight motion under load. Examples: pubic symphysis (relaxes during childbirth via relaxin), intervertebral discs (fibrocartilage annulus + gel-like nucleus pulposus, allow flexion/extension and absorb load), manubriosternal joint.

What is osteoarthritis?

Degenerative joint disease — articular cartilage wears, exposing subchondral bone (eburnation), forming osteophytes (bone spurs) and subchondral cysts. Pain worse with use, better with rest; morning stiffness <30 min. Knees, hips, hands (DIP — Heberden nodes, PIP — Bouchard nodes), spine. Risk factors: age, obesity (each kg adds ~4 kg load on knees), prior injury, female sex, genetics. Treatment: weight loss, exercise, NSAIDs, intra-articular steroids, hyaluronic acid, ultimately joint replacement (>1 million knees and hips in US/yr).

How does rheumatoid arthritis differ from OA?

RA is autoimmune (anti-CCP, RF antibodies); systemic; symmetric small-joint involvement (MCP, PIP — sparing DIP), wrists; morning stiffness >1 hr; warm, boggy synovitis. Pannus (inflammatory tissue) erodes cartilage and bone — joint deformity (ulnar deviation, swan neck, boutonniere). Extra-articular: rheumatoid nodules, ILD, scleritis, vasculitis. Treatment: methotrexate first-line DMARD; biologics (TNF, IL-6, JAK inhibitors) for refractory disease.

What about gout?

Crystal arthropathy — monosodium urate crystals deposit in joints when serum uric acid is supersaturated (>6.8 mg/dL). Acute attack: sudden, severe, monoarticular — classically first MTP joint (podagra). Triggered by alcohol, red meat, dehydration, surgery. Diagnosis: synovial fluid analysis showing negatively birefringent needle-shaped crystals under polarized light. Treatment: NSAIDs, colchicine, steroids acutely; allopurinol or febuxostat for chronic urate-lowering. Pseudogout — calcium pyrophosphate, positively birefringent, knee common.

What's a meniscus?

Fibrocartilage discs in the knee (medial and lateral) between femur and tibia. Distribute load (carry ~50-70% of joint force), shock absorb, deepen articular surface. Avascular inner two-thirds doesn't heal. Tears common (sports — twisting on planted foot; degenerative in older patients) — clicking, locking, joint line tenderness. MRI diagnostic. Arthroscopic repair if peripheral and acute; partial meniscectomy if degenerative — but accelerates OA. Similar discs: TMJ, distal radioulnar joint.