How does cartilage receive nutrients?

1 Answer
Dec 28, 2015

The nutrients diffuse in from other vascularized, or nutrient rich, areas - the perichondrium or synovial fluid.

Explanation:

As cartilage is avascular (doesn't contain blood vessels) it cannot receive nutrients via the bloodstream. Instead, cartilage relies on two different sources.

![www.interactive-biology.com](https://d2jmvrsizmvf4x.cloudfront.net/0KNw7D9PRkKE9citb7J9_%22nj)

Synovial Fluid - this is found in joints and supplies nutrients to surrounding chondrocytes (cartilage cells) through diffusion. This is how articular cartilage (the cartilage in bones) receive nutrients, as they don't have a perichondrium.

![http://medsci.indiana.edu](https://useruploads.socratic.org/F7AWCLYlQLSlspBP5Po3_jl.jpg)

Perichondrium - This is how hyaline and elastic cartilage get nutrients. The perichondrium is a dense, irregular layer of fibrous tissue that covers the cartilage and is vascularized (has blood vessels) so can provide nutrients.

I hope this helps, let me know if i can help in any other way:)