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Published byRhoda Jordan Modified over 8 years ago
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skeleton – bone and cartilage embryos: hyaline cartilage young children: most replaced by bone bridge of nose, parts of ribs, joints = still cartilage ossification – bone formation lose hyaline cartilage keep articular cartilage
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allows for normal proportions and strength during long bone growth response to calcium levels in blood removal or deposit of calcium in/from bones pull on bones from gravity and muscles build bone strength through stress atrophy – loss due to lack of stress rickets – bones of children fail to calcify
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Young bones break from trauma. Older bones break due to thinning and weakening.
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simple clean break no skin penetration
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compound broken ends protrude through soft tissue and skin also called open fracture big risk of infection
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comminuted many small pieces common in elderly compression crushed bone pressed inward (skull fracture)
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impacted broken ends forced onto each other (hip or wrist)
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spiral twisting break (sports) greenstick incomplete break
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reduction = realignment of broken ends closed reduction= rejoined without surgery open reduction = surgery using pins and wires immobilized for 6 to 8 weeks
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hematoma fibrocartilage callus granulation tissue – cartilage, matrix, collagen closes gap in bone bony callus replaces fibrocartilage callus remodeled due to stress on fracture site “Patches” fracture over several months.
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