The spine is a column of bone and cartilage that extends from
the base of the skull to the pelvis. It encloses and protects the spinal cord
and supports the trunk of the body and the head. The spine is made up of
approximately thirty-three bones called "vertebrae." Each pair of
vertebrae is connected by a joint which stabilizes the vertebral column and
allows it to move.
Between each pair of vertebrae is a disk-shaped pad of
fibrous cartilage with a jelly-like core, which is called the "intervertebral"
disk - or usually just the "disk". These disks cushion the vertebrae
during movement. The entire spine encloses and protects the spinal cord, which
is a column of nerve tracts running from every area of the body to the brain.
The vertebrae are bound together by two long, thick ligaments running the entire
length of the spine and by smaller ligaments between each pair of vertebrae.
Several groups of muscles are also attached to the vertebrae, and these control
movements of the spine as well as to support it. Quasimodo, the central
character of Victor Hugo's novel, "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," is
probably the most famous of all real or fictional sufferers of "kyphosis,"
an abnormal, backward curvature of the spine.