How does the skeletal system work with other systems The skeleton provides the main framework, the shape and integrity of the body If there was no skeleton, the body and its musculature would all lie as one big heap of muscle and tissue on the floor - a great big blob! Muscles attach to the various parts of the skeleton, which allow you to move 'arms, legs, etc. ' W/O the skeleton, muscles could not act It also allows channels and tunnels for the circulatory vessels and nervous tissue to pass Bones also act protectively. Perhaps the most obvious case of this is in the form of the rib cage, which protects heart and lungs - organs vital for very life itself.
Some less known protection resides in that provided for the large arteries and nerves that pass under the arm pits and on the insides of the arm. Likewise, in the lower extremities, the hip bone, thigh bone upper femur and lower sacrum at the back protect bowels, vitals and large arteries and nerves that pass down the insides of the legs. The skull is one big protective mechanism Further, bone tissue supplies blood cells for the circulation and aids the immune system.
One way that the skeletal system can affect almost all of the other body systems is through its role in calcium homeostasis. Calcium is a mineral that is present in the body and is critical for the function of all cells, particularly nerve and muscle cells. The body has to maintain the blood levels of calcium within a very narrow range to work properly.
Colorado State's Pathophysiology department notes that the skeletal system is the largest reservoir of calcium in the body. As a result, the bones are involved in keeping blood calcium levels at acceptable concentrations. The parathyroid (a gland near the thyroid which regulates calcium levels in the body) secretes a hormone when blood calcium is low that causes the bones to release some of their calcium.
Another hormone, called calcitonin, is made when too much calcium is in the blood and works to store some of the excess calcium in the skeletal system.
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