Type of Joint
| Description
| Movement
| Example
|
Ball-and-socket joint
| The ball-shaped head of one bone fits into a depression (socket) in another bone
| Circular movements; joints can move in all planes, and rotation is possible
| Shoulder, hip
|
Condyloid joint
| Oval-shaped condyle of one bone fits into oval-shaped cavity of another bone.
| Can move in different planes but cannot rotate
| Knuckles (joints between metacarpals and phalanges)
|
Gliding joint
| Flat or slightly curved surfaces join
| Sliding or twisting in different planes
| Joints between carpal bones (wrist) and between tarsal bones (ankle)
|
Hinge joint
| Convex surface joins with concave surface
| Up and down motion in one plane
| Elbow, knee
|
Pivot joint
| Cylinder-shaped projection on one bone is surrounded by a ring of another bone and ligament
| Rotation is only movement possible
| Joint between radius and ulna at elbow and joint between atlas and axis at top of vertebral column
|
Saddle joint
| Each bone is saddle shaped and fits into the saddle-shaped region of the opposite bone
| Many movements are possible
| Joint between carpal and metacarpal bones of the thumb
|
You know that certain types of joints can perform certain kinds of movements. The following list is a quick overview of those special movements. The two basic types of movements are angular and circular.