| 1. | These cells typically differentiate into fibrocartilage and rarely form hyaline cartilage.
|
| 2. | Hyaline cartilage caps the long bones and the spinal vertebrae.
|
| 3. | Hyaline cartilage is present in the bronchi, surrounding the smooth muscle layer.
|
| 4. | These heteroplatic elements may include hyaline cartilage, rhabdomyoblasts, and neuroglial tissue.
|
| 5. | Hyaline cartilage has less cells than elastic cartilage, there is more intercellular space.
|
| 6. | The next phase is the replacement of the hyaline cartilage and woven bone with trabecular bone.
|
| 7. | This growth center consists of hyaline cartilage underneath the periosteum on the articulating surface of the condyle.
|
| 8. | Post-surgery reparative cartilage is inferior to healthy hyaline cartilage in glycosaminoglycan concentration, immunohistochemical appearance.
|
| 9. | In this joint, hyaline cartilage on the sacral side moves against fibrocartilage on the iliac side.
|
| 10. | The bronchi in the conducting zone are reinforced with hyaline cartilage in order to hold open the airways.
|