It is a joint found between the sternum (breastbone) and any of the ribs that attach to it.
a plane joint
Sternocostal or costosternal means pertaining to the breastbone and ribs.Costosternal
Pectoralis major sternocostal part and anterior fibres of Deltoid
Costovertebral is the medical term meaning pertaining to the ribs and vertebrae.
The heart has three surfaces: anterior, inferior and posterior. The anterior, sternocostal surface, the inferior or diaphragmatic surface and the base of the heart, the posterior surface.
They are as follows in descending order:atlantooccipital - gliding (diarthrotic)atlantoaxial - pivot (diarthrotic)intervertebral - gliding (amphiarthrotic)costovertebral - gliding (diarthrotic)sternoclavicular - gliding (diarthrotic)sternocostal - gliding (diarthrotic)sacroiliac - gliding (diarthrotic)pubic symphysis - gliding (amphiarthrotic)
Sternocostal or costosternal means pertaining to the breastbone and ribs.Costosternal
headThe pedicle of the rib articulates with the transverse process of the thoracic vertebra.
No, you have 12 pairs of ribs. The first 10 of them are connected to the sternum through the coastal cartilage. But the last two are free floaters, and they are not connected to the sternum at all.
RELATIONS OF THE AORTIC ARCThe arch of the aorta or the transverse aorta is the part of the aorta that begins at the level of the upper border of the second sternocostal articulation of the right side, and runs at first upward, backward, and to the left in front of the trachea; it is then directed backward on the left side of the trachea and finally passes downward on the left side of the body of the fourththoracic vertebra, at the lower border of which it becomes continuous with the descending aorta.
Sychondrosis (a type of hyaline cartillage) is the joint between the first rib and the sternum, otherwise referred to as the first sternocostal joint. this joint type is also found in the epiphyseal plates of long bones prior to fusion.
Hyaline cartilage normal covers the articular surfaces of bones in typical synovial joints and primary cartilaginous joints. Certail joints do not have hyaline cartilage covering the bony elements. These include: 1. Fibrous Joints - skull sutures, gymphosis (teeth) and interosseus joints (radius and ulna shafts) 2. Atypical Synovial Joints (these have fibrocartilage instead of hyaline cartilage covering the bones). These include the Temporomandibular (TMJ), Acromioclavicular Joint (ACJ), Sternoclavicular Joint, and 2nd to 7th Sternocostal Joints.