Glosarium Anatomi

Istilah dan definisi penting untuk anatomi manusia.

General Anatomy

Inferior

Situated below or toward the foot end of the body (also called caudal). The kidneys …

Contralateral

On the opposite side of the body. Most descending motor and ascending pain pathways decussate …

Coronal Plane

A vertical plane that divides the body into anterior and posterior portions, also called the …

Afferent

Conducting impulses or fluids toward a central point. Afferent nerve fibers carry sensory signals toward …

Deep

Located further from the body surface, beneath more superficial structures. Deep muscles lie beneath superficial …

Anterior

Situated toward the front of the body. In anatomical position, the anterior surface faces forward. …

Distal

Situated further from the point of origin or attachment, typically the trunk. Used primarily for …

Dorsal

Pertaining to the back surface of the body; synonymous with posterior in humans. Dorsal also …

Efferent

Conducting impulses or fluids away from a central point. Efferent nerve fibers carry motor signals …

Ipsilateral

On the same side of the body. Ipsilateral motor and sensory pathways travel on the …

Lateral

Situated further from the median plane (midline) of the body. The fibula is lateral to …

Medial

Situated closer to the median plane (midline) of the body. The ulna is medial to …

Posterior

Situated toward the back of the body. In anatomical position, the posterior surface faces backward. …

Proximal

Situated closer to the point of origin or attachment, typically the trunk. Used primarily for …

Sagittal Plane

A vertical plane that divides the body into left and right portions. The midsagittal (median) …

Superficial

Located closer to the body surface. Superficial structures are closer to the skin than deep …

Superior

Situated above or toward the head end of the body (also called cranial). The heart …

Transverse Plane

A horizontal plane that divides the body into superior and inferior portions, also called the …

Ventral

Pertaining to the belly or front surface of the body; synonymous with anterior in humans. …

Anatomical Position

The standard reference posture used in anatomy: body erect, face forward, feet together, arms at …

Musculoskeletal

Articulation

A joint or point of contact between two or more bones. Articulations are classified as …

Fascia

A sheet or band of fibrous connective tissue that envelops, separates, and supports muscles and …

Ligament

A band of dense fibrous connective tissue that connects bone to bone, providing stability to …

Annulus Fibrosus

The tough outer fibrocartilaginous ring of an intervertebral disc that surrounds and contains the gelatinous …

Bursa

A fluid-filled sac lined with synovial membrane that reduces friction between tendons, muscles, and bony …

Enthesis

The site where a tendon, ligament, or joint capsule attaches to bone. Enthesopathy (inflammation at …

Insertion

The distal, usually more movable attachment point of a skeletal muscle. During contraction, the insertion …

Intermuscular Septum

A sheet of deep fascia extending inward from the outer investing fascia to attach to …

Intervertebral Disc

A fibrocartilaginous cushion between adjacent vertebral bodies consisting of an outer annulus fibrosus and an …

Investing Fascia

The outermost layer of deep fascia that encircles an entire limb or body region, encasing …

Labrum

A ring of fibrocartilage attached to the rim of certain joint sockets (particularly the hip …

Meniscus

A crescent-shaped fibrocartilage pad found in certain joints, most notably the knee. Menisci improve joint …

Myotendinous Junction

The interface where muscle fibers meet tendon, representing the transition zone between contractile and non-contractile …

Nucleus Pulposus

The gelatinous, water-rich core of an intervertebral disc that acts as a shock absorber and …

Origin

The proximal, usually less movable attachment point of a skeletal muscle. During contraction, the origin …

Raphe

A seam or ridge of tissue formed where two symmetrical halves meet, often serving as …

Sesamoid Bone

A small bone embedded within a tendon, typically near a joint, that protects the tendon …

Synovial Fluid

A viscous, egg-white-like fluid secreted by the synovial membrane that lubricates synovial joints and provides …

Synovial Membrane

The inner lining of a joint capsule that secretes synovial fluid to lubricate and nourish …

Tendon

A fibrous band of connective tissue that attaches a muscle to a bone. Tendons transmit …

Cardiovascular

Anastomosis

A connection between two blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, or other tubular structures. Arterial anastomoses provide …

Diastole

The phase of the cardiac cycle when the heart chambers relax and fill with blood. …

Endothelium

The single layer of squamous epithelial cells lining the interior surface of blood vessels and …

Lumen

The interior space of a tubular structure, such as a blood vessel or intestine. The …

Perfusion

The passage of blood through the vascular bed of a tissue or organ. Adequate perfusion …

Systole

The phase of the cardiac cycle when the heart chambers contract and pump blood. Ventricular …

Atrium

One of the two superior receiving chambers of the heart. The right atrium receives deoxygenated …

Bundle of His

A collection of heart muscle cells (specialized cardiac fibers) that transmit electrical impulses from the …

Endocardium

The thin inner lining of the heart chambers and cardiac valves, continuous with the endothelium …

Myocardium

The muscular middle layer of the heart wall, composed of specialized cardiac muscle cells (cardiomyocytes). …

Pericardium

The double-layered fibroserous sac enclosing the heart and the roots of the great vessels. The …

Purkinje Fibers

Specialized cardiac muscle fibers in the subendocardial layer that rapidly conduct electrical impulses from the …

Septum (cardiac)

The muscular wall dividing the heart into left and right halves. The interventricular septum separates …

Sinoatrial Node

A cluster of pacemaker cells in the right atrial wall near the opening of the …

Tunica Adventitia

The outermost layer of a blood vessel wall, composed of fibrous connective tissue that anchors …

Tunica Intima

The innermost layer of a blood vessel wall, consisting of endothelium resting on a thin …

Tunica Media

The middle layer of a blood vessel wall, composed of smooth muscle and elastic tissue. …

Valve (cardiac)

A structure that ensures unidirectional blood flow through the heart. The four cardiac valves are …

Ventricle

One of the two inferior pumping chambers of the heart. The right ventricle pumps deoxygenated …

Atrioventricular Node

A cluster of specialized conduction cells at the base of the right atrium near the …

Neuroanatomy

Ganglion

A cluster of neuron cell bodies located outside the central nervous system. Dorsal root ganglia …

Axon

The long, slender projection of a neuron that conducts electrical impulses away from the cell …

Dermatome

An area of skin supplied by sensory nerve fibers from a single spinal nerve root. …

Meninges

The three protective membranes (dura mater, arachnoid mater, pia mater) surrounding the brain and spinal …

Myelin

A fatty insulating sheath surrounding many nerve fibers that increases the speed of electrical impulse …

Neuron

The fundamental excitable cell of the nervous system, specialized for receiving and transmitting electrical and …

Plexus

A network of intersecting nerves or blood vessels. Major nerve plexuses include the cervical, brachial, …

Synapse

The junction between two neurons or between a neuron and an effector cell. Neurotransmitters released …

Astrocyte

Star-shaped glial cells that are the most abundant cells in the brain. Astrocytes maintain the …

Brainstem

The region connecting the cerebrum and cerebellum to the spinal cord, consisting of the midbrain, …

Cerebellum

The large hindbrain structure posterior to the brainstem that coordinates voluntary movement, balance, and motor …

Cerebral Cortex

The outer layer of gray matter covering the cerebral hemispheres, organized into six cellular layers …

Dendrite

Branching cytoplasmic extensions of a neuron that receive synaptic inputs from other neurons and conduct …

Glial Cell

Non-neuronal supporting cells of the nervous system that provide structural support, insulation, nutrients, and immune …

Hypothalamus (neuro)

A small region at the base of the diencephalon that controls the autonomic nervous system, …

Oligodendrocyte

Glial cells of the central nervous system that produce myelin sheaths around axons, enabling rapid …

Schwann Cell

Glial cells of the peripheral nervous system that form myelin sheaths around axons. Unlike oligodendrocytes, …

Spinal Cord

The cylindrical bundle of neural tissue extending from the medulla oblongata to the conus medullaris …

Thalamus

A paired gray-matter structure in the diencephalon that serves as the major relay station for …

Blood-Brain Barrier

A selective permeability barrier formed by tight junctions between cerebral endothelial cells, supported by astrocyte …

Clinical

Embolism

Obstruction of a blood vessel by a mass (embolus) that has traveled from another site …

Edema

Abnormal accumulation of fluid in interstitial tissue spaces, causing swelling. Edema can result from increased …

Hypertrophy

Increase in the size of a tissue or organ due to enlargement of its constituent …

Inflammation

A protective vascular and cellular response to injury, infection, or irritation characterized by the cardinal …

Ischemia

Insufficient blood supply to a tissue or organ, resulting in oxygen deprivation and potential tissue …

Necrosis

Death of cells or tissues due to injury, disease, or failure of blood supply. Unlike …

Stenosis

Abnormal narrowing of a passage or opening in the body. Vascular stenosis (such as carotid …

Adhesion

Abnormal fibrous bands that form between tissue surfaces following inflammation, injury, or surgery. Intra-abdominal adhesions …

Fistula

An abnormal communication between two epithelium-lined surfaces, such as two organs or between an organ …

Hemorrhage

Escape of blood from a ruptured blood vessel. Hemorrhage can be classified by location (e.g., …

Herniation

Protrusion of an organ or tissue through an abnormal opening in its containing wall. Intervertebral …

Infarction

Tissue necrosis resulting from prolonged ischemia due to obstruction of arterial supply or venous drainage. …

Ischemic

Relating to or caused by ischemia (insufficient blood supply). The adjective is used in clinical …

Metastasis

The spread of malignant cells from a primary tumor to distant sites via blood vessels, …

Neoplasm

An abnormal mass of tissue resulting from uncontrolled cell proliferation. Neoplasms are classified as benign …

Prolapse

Downward displacement or falling of an organ from its normal position. Mitral valve prolapse, uterine …

Sepsis

A life-threatening systemic inflammatory response to infection in which the body's immune response causes widespread …

Thrombosis

The formation of a blood clot (thrombus) within a blood vessel, obstructing normal blood flow. …

Abscess

A localized collection of pus surrounded by inflamed tissue, resulting from bacterial infection. Abscesses require …

Atrophy

Decrease in the size of a tissue or organ due to loss of cells or …

Skeletal System

Diaphysis

The shaft or central portion of a long bone, composed primarily of compact cortical bone …

Endosteum

A thin vascular membrane lining the inner surface of bone (medullary cavity) and the surfaces …

Epiphysis

The rounded end of a long bone, composed mainly of cancellous (spongy) bone and covered …

Metaphysis

The region between the epiphysis and diaphysis of a long bone that contains the epiphyseal …

Ossification

The process of bone tissue formation. Intramembranous ossification forms flat bones directly from mesenchyme; endochondral …

Osteoblast

A bone-forming cell derived from mesenchymal stem cells that synthesizes and secretes the organic matrix …

Periosteum

The dense fibrous membrane covering the outer surface of bone except at articular cartilage. The …

Condyle

A rounded, knuckle-like articular prominence on a bone. Condyles form part of synovial joint surfaces; …

Crest (bone)

A narrow ridge or raised border along a bone surface. The iliac crest of the …

Epicondyle

A projection on the surface of a condyle that serves primarily as a site of …

Facet (bone)

A small, flat articular surface on a bone. Vertebral facet joints (zygapophyseal joints) allow gliding …

Fontanelle

A membranous gap between the incompletely ossified skull bones of a newborn, allowing the cranium …

Foramen

A natural opening or passage in a bone or other anatomical structure through which nerves, …

Fossa

A shallow concave depression on the surface of a bone, often serving as an articular …

Haversian System

The structural unit of compact cortical bone, also called an osteon, consisting of concentric lamellae …

Notch

An indentation or concavity on the edge of a bone. The sciatic notch of the …

Osteoclast

A large, multinucleated cell derived from hematopoietic monocyte precursors that resorbs bone by secreting hydrochloric …

Osteocyte

A mature bone cell enclosed within a lacuna (small cavity) in the bone matrix, connected …

Process (bone)

Any prominent projection or outgrowth from a bone. Processes serve as attachment sites for muscles …

Spine (bone)

A sharp, slender projection of bone, sharper than a tubercle or process. The spine of …

Sulcus

A groove or furrow on the surface of a bone, often accommodating tendons, vessels, or …

Suture (cranial)

A fibrous immovable joint between adjacent bones of the skull. Major sutures include the coronal, …

Trochanter

A large, blunt, irregular bony prominence found exclusively on the femur. The greater trochanter is …

Tuberosity

A large, rough, rounded projection on a bone that serves as an attachment site for …

Volkmann's Canal

Perforating canals that run perpendicular or oblique to the long axis of bone, connecting adjacent …

Muscular System

Prime Mover

The muscle primarily responsible for a specific action at a joint; synonymous with agonist. In …

Agonist

The primary muscle responsible for producing a specific movement; also called the prime mover. For …

Antagonist

A muscle that opposes or reverses the action of an agonist. During elbow flexion, the …

Circular Muscle

A muscle whose fibers are arranged in concentric rings around an opening (sphincter). Contraction closes …

Concentric Contraction

A muscle contraction in which the muscle shortens while under tension, producing movement in the …

Eccentric Contraction

A muscle contraction in which the muscle lengthens while under tension, decelerating a movement or …

Fixator

A muscle that stabilizes the origin of an agonist by anchoring the proximal bone, allowing …

Fusiform

Describing a spindle-shaped muscle with fibers running parallel to the line of pull, tapering at …

Isometric Contraction

A type of muscle contraction where the muscle generates tension without changing its length. Isometric …

Isotonic Contraction

A type of muscle contraction where the muscle changes length while maintaining relatively constant tension. …

Motor End Plate

The specialized region of skeletal muscle fiber membrane (sarcolemma) that forms one side of the …

Motor Unit

A single motor neuron and all the skeletal muscle fibers it innervates. All fibers of …

Myofibril

A cylindrical bundle of contractile proteins (actin and myosin) running the length of a muscle …

Myosin

The molecular motor protein forming the thick filaments of the sarcomere. Myosin heads hydrolyze ATP …

Neuromuscular Junction

The chemical synapse between a motor neuron's axon terminal and a skeletal muscle fiber's motor …

Pennate

Describing a muscle fiber arrangement in which fibers are oriented at an angle to the …

Synergist

A muscle that assists the agonist in performing a movement or that stabilizes a joint …

Endomysium

The delicate sheath of connective tissue surrounding each individual muscle fiber (cell). It contains capillaries …

Epimysium

The outermost connective tissue sheath surrounding an entire skeletal muscle. The epimysium is continuous with …

Perimysium

A layer of connective tissue that bundles groups of muscle fibers into fascicles. The perimysium …

Retinaculum

A band of thickened deep fascia that holds tendons in place as they cross a …

Aponeurosis

A flat, sheet-like tendon that attaches a broad muscle to bone or to another muscle. …

Actin

A globular protein that polymerizes to form the thin filaments of the sarcomere. During muscle …

Convergent Muscle

A muscle in which a broad origin converges onto a narrow insertion, with muscle fibers …

Sarcomere

The basic contractile unit of a skeletal muscle fiber, bounded by two Z-discs. It contains …

Respiratory System

Alveolus

A tiny, thin-walled air sac at the terminus of the bronchiolar tree where gas exchange …

Bronchiole

A small airway less than 1 mm in diameter that lacks cartilage in its walls, …

Bronchus

A large cartilage-reinforced airway of the conducting zone. The trachea divides into the right and …

Diaphragm (muscle)

The dome-shaped musculotendinous sheet separating the thoracic and abdominal cavities. It is the principal muscle …

Gas Exchange

The diffusion of oxygen from alveolar air into pulmonary capillary blood, and of carbon dioxide …

Larynx

A cartilaginous structure in the anterior neck (C3-C6) that connects the pharynx to the trachea. …

Pharynx

A fibromuscular tube behind the nasal and oral cavities that serves as a common passage …

Pleura

The serous membrane enveloping each lung. The visceral pleura covers the lung surface; the parietal …

Pleural Cavity

The potential space between the visceral and parietal pleural layers containing a small amount of …

Surfactant

A complex mixture of phospholipids and proteins (primarily dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine) secreted by Type II pneumocytes that …

Tidal Volume

The volume of air inhaled or exhaled in a single normal, quiet breath, approximately 500 …

Trachea

The cartilaginous and membranous tube extending from the larynx (at the level of C6) to …

Ventilation

The mechanical process of moving air in and out of the lungs through the respiratory …

Vital Capacity

The maximum volume of air that can be exhaled after a maximal inhalation, equal to …

Dead Space

The volume of air that occupies the conducting airways and does not participate in gas …

Digestive System

Acinus (pancreas)

A cluster of secretory cells (acinar cells) in the exocrine pancreas that produce and secrete …

Bile

A yellow-green alkaline fluid produced by hepatocytes and stored in the gallbladder. It contains bile …

Haustra

The sac-like pouches of the large intestine formed by contraction of the taeniae coli, giving …

Hepatic Lobule

The basic structural and functional unit of the liver, roughly hexagonal in shape, consisting of …

Islets of Langerhans

Clusters of endocrine cells scattered throughout the exocrine pancreatic tissue, comprising approximately 1-2% of pancreatic …

Mesentery

A double fold of peritoneum that attaches the small intestine to the posterior abdominal wall …

Microvilli

Microscopic projections on the apical surface of enterocytes (intestinal absorptive cells) that form the brush …

Omentum

An apron-like fold of peritoneum attached to the stomach and transverse colon. The greater omentum …

Peristalsis

Coordinated, sequential smooth muscle contractions and relaxations that propel ingested material along the gastrointestinal tract. …

Peritoneum

The serous membrane lining the abdominal cavity and covering most of the abdominal organs. The …

Rugae

Large longitudinal folds in the mucosa of the stomach that allow the organ to distend …

Sphincter

A ring of smooth or skeletal muscle that controls the passage of material through a …

Taeniae Coli

Three distinct longitudinal bands of the outer smooth muscle layer that run along the length …

Villi

Finger-like projections of the small intestinal mucosa (approximately 0.5-1.6 mm tall) that dramatically increase the …

Retroperitoneal

Describing organs located behind the parietal peritoneum in the retroperitoneal space. Primary retroperitoneal organs (kidneys, …

Endocrine System

Negative Feedback

A regulatory mechanism in which the output of a physiological system inhibits its own production, …

Hormone

A chemical messenger secreted by endocrine cells into the bloodstream that exerts regulatory effects on …

Receptor

A protein on or within a target cell that binds a specific hormone or signaling …

Adrenal Medulla

The inner region of the adrenal gland, composed of chromaffin cells derived from neural crest. …

Gonad

The primary reproductive endocrine organs: testes in males and ovaries in females. Gonads produce steroid …

Hypothalamus

The diencephalic region that integrates the nervous and endocrine systems by producing releasing and inhibiting …

Pancreatic Islets

The endocrine component of the pancreas (Islets of Langerhans) that regulates blood glucose homeostasis. Beta …

Parathyroid

Four small glands embedded on the posterior surface of the thyroid that secrete parathyroid hormone …

Pineal Gland

A small pine cone-shaped endocrine gland in the epithalamus that produces melatonin, a hormone regulating …

Pituitary Gland

A pea-sized endocrine gland suspended from the hypothalamus by the infundibulum and housed in the …

Positive Feedback

A regulatory mechanism in which the output of a system amplifies further production, driving the …

Target Cell

A cell that possesses specific receptors for a particular hormone and responds to it. Specificity …

Thymus

A bilobed lymphoid and endocrine organ in the anterior mediastinum that is most active in …

Thyroid Gland

A bilobed endocrine gland in the anterior neck that produces thyroid hormones (T3 and T4) …

Adrenal Cortex

The outer region of the adrenal gland, divided into three zones: zona glomerulosa (mineralocorticoids, primarily …

Histology

Cuboidal

Describing epithelial cells that are approximately equal in height and width (cube-shaped), with a centrally …

Epithelium

One of the four primary tissue types, consisting of tightly packed cells with little extracellular …

Simple Epithelium

An epithelium consisting of a single layer of cells, all in contact with the basement …

Squamous

Describing flat, scale-like epithelial cells. Simple squamous epithelium lines blood vessels (endothelium), body cavities (mesothelium), …

Stratified Epithelium

An epithelium consisting of multiple cell layers, with only the basal layer contacting the basement …

Adipose Tissue

A specialized loose connective tissue composed predominantly of lipid-filled adipocytes. White adipose tissue stores energy, …

Areolar Tissue

A loose connective tissue with a loosely woven mesh of collagen, elastic, and reticular fibers …

Blood (tissue)

A specialized fluid connective tissue consisting of formed elements (erythrocytes, leukocytes, platelets) suspended in a …

Bone Tissue

A specialized connective tissue with a mineralized extracellular matrix of hydroxyapatite (calcium phosphate crystals) embedded …

Cartilage

A rigid but flexible avascular connective tissue composed of chondrocytes embedded in an extracellular matrix …

Columnar

Describing epithelial cells that are taller than they are wide, with an oval nucleus typically …

Connective Tissue

The most abundant and widely distributed of the four primary tissue types, characterized by cells …

Dense Irregular

A type of dense connective tissue in which collagen fibers are randomly interwoven in multiple …

Dense Regular

A type of dense connective tissue in which collagen fibers are arranged in parallel bundles, …

Elastic Cartilage

A flexible cartilage containing abundant elastic fibers in addition to type II collagen, giving it …

Elastic Tissue

A specialized connective tissue rich in elastin fibers that allows structures to stretch and recoil. …

Hyaline Cartilage

The most common type of cartilage, with a glassy, homogeneous matrix rich in type II …

Reticular Tissue

A loose connective tissue composed of a network of reticular fibers (fine type III collagen) …

Transitional Epithelium

A stratified epithelium unique to the urinary tract (renal pelvis, ureters, bladder) that can stretch …

Fibrocartilage

A tough cartilage containing abundant type I collagen bundles in addition to type II collagen …

Developmental Anatomy

Somite

Paired blocks of paraxial mesoderm that form in a cranial-to-caudal sequence during embryonic development. Each …

Trophoblast

The outer cell layer of the blastocyst that invades the uterine endometrium during implantation and …

Ectoderm

The outermost of the three primary germ layers of the embryo, formed during gastrulation. It …

Endoderm

The innermost of the three primary germ layers. It gives rise to the epithelial lining …

Mesoderm

The middle of the three primary germ layers, situated between ectoderm and endoderm. It gives …

Amnion

A thin extraembryonic membrane of ectodermal and mesodermal origin that encloses the embryo and fetus …

Blastocyst

The stage of human embryonic development (approximately day 5-6) consisting of a hollow sphere: an …

Gastrulation

The fundamental embryonic process (occurring during week 3 in humans) by which the bilaminar embryonic …

Neural Crest

A transient population of multipotent cells arising at the lateral margins of the neural plate …

Neural Tube

The embryonic precursor to the central nervous system, formed when the flat neural plate of …

Neurulation

The process (weeks 3-4) by which the neural plate, induced by the notochord, folds to …

Notochord

A rod-like structure of mesodermal origin that forms the primitive axial skeleton of the embryo …

Organogenesis

The embryonic period (weeks 3-8) during which the major organ systems are established from the …

Pharyngeal Arch

One of a series of mesodermal and neural crest-derived paired structures in the embryonic head …

Placenta

The discoid organ formed by the interlocking of the fetal chorion (trophoblast-derived) and the maternal …