The skeleton of the trunk is a row of separate bones, the vertebral column, on its own hardly a stable bridge. Its rigidity is maintained to a large extent by a compressive force produced in the massive muscle surrounding the column (Fig. 9.2). As a bridge, therefore, this structure is comparable to prestressed concrete. We have already seen that the trabecular network is oriented axially within the vertebral bodies, to resist the tensile stress (Fig. 3.2). When the axial muscles are relaxed as during anesthesia, the vertebral column is no longer rigid. | The skeleton of the trunk is a row of separate bones, the vertebral column, on its own hardly a stable bridge. Its rigidity is maintained to a large extent by a compressive force produced in the massive muscle surrounding the column (Fig. 9.2). As a bridge, therefore, this structure is comparable to prestressed concrete. We have already seen that the trabecular network is oriented axially within the vertebral bodies, to resist the tensile stress (Fig. 3.2). When the axial muscles are relaxed as during anesthesia, the vertebral column is no longer rigid. |