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The word “fracture” means a break in a bone. There two kinds of fractures: closed and open. In a closed fracture there is no wound on the skin. In an open fracture there is a wound. Open fractures are more serious than closed ones.
If a person breaks his arm or leg he complains of pain in the place of a break. The pain becomes more severe if he presses the place or tries to move.
Swelling appears quickly. Do not let the person move. Use a splint for the broken limb. Bind the splints to the limb but not at the place of the fracture.
Doctors use X-rays to see the break and put plaster casts on the broken limbs.
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Результаты (русский) 1: [копия]
Скопировано!
Слово «перелом» означает разрыв в кости. Существует два вида переломов: закрытые и открытые. В закрытых переломов нет никакой раны на коже. Открытый перелом в рану. Открытые переломы являются более серьезными, чем те закрыт.Если человек нарушает его руку или ногу, он жалуется на боли месте перерыв. Боль становится более серьезным, если он нажимает место или пытается двигаться.Опухоль появляется быстро. Не позволяйте лицо двигаться. Используйте шину для сломанной конечности. Привяжите шины, конечности, но не в месте перелома.Доктора использовать рентген, чтобы увидеть перерыва и гипсовые слепки на сломанной конечности.
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Результаты (русский) 2:[копия]
Скопировано!
Слово «перелом» означает перерыв в кости. Там два вида переломов: закрытые и открытые. В закрытом перелома нет раны на коже. В открытый перелом есть рана. Открытые переломы являются более серьезными, чем закрытые. Если человек ломает руку или ногу, он жалуется на боли в месте разрыва. Боль становится более серьезными, если он нажимает место или пытается двигаться. Отек появляется быстро. Не позволяйте человек шаг. Используйте шину для сломанной конечности. Свяжите лубки на конечности, но не в месте перелома. Врачи используют рентгеновские лучи, чтобы увидеть перерыв и положить муляжи на сломанными конечностями.
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Результаты (русский) 3:[копия]
Скопировано!
Pocket Word เอกสาร » แตก » หมายถึงการทำลายในไขกระดูก . มี 2 ชนิดของการเปิดและปิดและหัก ในการปิดบาดแผลที่แตกบนและเป็นโหลดของนูสกิน . . . . . . . แต่แอนมีกระดูกหักแผลเปิดแผล กระดูกหักแผลเปิด — ปิดมากกว่าที่คุณ .ถ้าเป็นคนที่เขาทำตามที่เขาแขนขาหรือข้อร้องเรียนในสถานที่แห่งความเจ็บปวดของการแบ่ง . ที่ซึ่งเขาได้กลายเป็นปัญหาที่รุนแรงมากขึ้น presses ครั้งหรือถ้าสถานที่ที่จะ . . .Swelling appears ได้อย่างรวดเร็ว ไม่ย้ายไป . ใช้สำหรับการหักแขนขาหลวม . splints ไปผูกที่แขนขาแต่ไม่ที่สถานที่ของกระดูกหมอเอ็กซ์เรย์เพื่อดู casts ยิปซั่มและแตกใส่บนร่างกายที่แตกสลาย
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- In the early days trere were gardens on
- Мой старший брат увлекается спортом.В вы
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Meaning of FRACTURE in English
in pathology, a break in a bone, caused by stress. Certain normal and pathological conditions may predispose bones to fracture. Children have relatively weak bones because of incomplete calcification, and older adults, especially women past menopause, develop osteoporosis, a weakening of bone concomitant with aging. Pathological conditions involving the skeleton, most commonly the spread of cancer to bones, may also cause weak bones. In such cases very minor stresses may produce a fracture. Other factors, such as general health, nutrition, and heredity, also have effects on the liability of bones to fracture and their ability to heal. A fracture is called simple (closed) when the overlying skin is not broken and the bone is not exposed to the air; it is called compound (open) when the bone is exposed. When a bone weakened by disease breaks from a minor stress, it is termed a pathological fracture. An incomplete, or greenstick, fracture occurs when the bone cracks and bends but does not completely break; when the bone does break into separate pieces, the condition is called a complete fracture. An impacted fracture occurs when the broken ends of the bone are jammed together by the force of the injury. A comminuted fracture is one in which the broken ends of the bone are shattered into many pieces. The most common symptoms of fracture are pain and tenderness at the site, a sensation of grating or grinding with movement, and inability to use the limb or body part supported by the bone. Physical signs include deformity of the part, swelling in the region of the fracture, discoloration of the overlying skin, and abnormal mobility of the bone. All fractures attempt to heal in the same fashion. The injured bone quickly produces new tissue that extends across the fracture line and joins the broken pieces together. At first this new tissue is soft and puttylike; later, bony and hard. While re-forming, the bone must be protected from weight bearing and movement between the fracture ends. The major complications of fracture include failure to heal, healing in a position that interferes with function, and loss of function despite good healing. Failure to heal is frequently a result of infection. Because healing will not ordinarily take place until infection is brought under control, all procedures are aimed at combating infection at the site of injury whenever the possibility exists (as in compound fractures). Failure to heal may also result from severe destruction of bone, disruption of blood supply, or inadequate immobilization of the limb or body part involved; sometimes the cause cannot be determined. Healing is encouraged by cleansing of the fracture site, closure of the overlying broken skin by suture or skin graft, and reimmobilization; bone chips may be used to fill a gap in the fractured bone left by long infection or severe bone destruction. Healing in a poor position, or malunion, may occur when realignment has been improper or when injuries have destroyed large portions of the bone so that deformity must be accepted to salvage it. Sometimes the bone is refractured therapeutically so that proper alignment may be achieved. Injuries to the growth centres of bones in children cause malunion and subsequent growth in a deformed manner. Fractures in joints present a particularly serious problem because the normally smooth surface of the joint may be destroyed. If the fracture heals in irregular alignment, the joint is likely to be permanently stiff and painful; osteoarthritis is a frequent complication in old age. Unless the surface of the joint can be accurately aligned by manipulation or traction, surgery is necessary. Loss of function may be caused by prolonged immobilization, by heavy scarring after severe injury or infection, or by injury to motor nerves. Slate, a metamorphic rock, showing typical splintery fracture and thin layering (slightly larger in mineralogy, appearance of a surface broken in directions other than along cleavage planes. There are several kinds of fractures: conchoidal (curved concavities resembling shellse.g., flint, quartz, glass); even (rough, approximately plane surfaces); uneven (rough and completely irregular surfaces, the commonest fracture type); hackly (sharp edges and jagged points and depressionse.g., most metals); and splintery (partially separated splinters or fibrese.g., jadeite [see photograph]). See also cleavage.
Britannica English vocabulary.
Английский словарь Британика.
2012
Цели занятия:
Образовательная: познакомить студентов с
признаками переломов, правилами ухода при
наличии гипса, отработать лексику по теме,
повторить грамматический материал по теме Present
Simple.
Студент должен уметь: читать и переводить
тексты по теме занятия, строить высказывания с
использованием новой лексики по теме, строить
предложения в Present Simple.
Студент должен знать: правила употребления
временной формы Present Simple, лексику по теме,
признаки переломов, правила ухода за гипсом.
Оснащение.
- Наглядные пособия: таблицы.
- Дидактический материал: рабочая тетрадь.
ТСО: компьютер, презентация.
Внутридисциплинарные связи: темы по
анатомии.
Междисциплинарные связи: анатомия,
физиология, гигиена.
Литература: основная С.А. Тылкина. Пособие по
английскому языку для медицинских училищ. — М.:
АНМИ, 2000.
Ход занятия
1. Организационный момент.
2. Основная часть.
1) Повторение лексики по теме (словарный диктант
с русского на английский, составление
словосочетаний, перевод предложений со словами с
английского на русский):
Fracture, to break, bone, closed, open, to complain of, to move, swelling, to appear,
splint, bind, X-rays, plaster cast, limb.
2) Работа над текстом:
Fracture
The word “fracture” means a break in a bone. There two kinds of fractures: closed
and open. In a closed fracture there is no wound on the skin. In an open fracture there is
a wound. Open fractures are more serious than closed ones.
If a person breaks his arm or leg he complains of pain in the place of a break. The
pain becomes more severe if he presses the place or tries to move.
Swelling appears quickly. Do not let the person move. Use a splint for the broken limb.
Bind the splints to the limb but not at the place of the fracture.
Doctors use X-rays to see the break and put plaster casts on the broken limbs.
a) Прочитать и перевести текст.
b) Найти в тексте следующие выражения:
нет раны на коже, более серьёзный, жаловаться на
боль, становиться более сильной, пытаться
двигаться, не позволяйте, но не в месте перелома,
на сломанные конечности
c) Ответить на вопросы:
1. What does the word “fracture” mean?
2. What kinds of fractures do you know?
3. What fracture is more serious?
4. When does the pain become more severe?
5. How can you help the person with fracture?
6. What do the doctors do with fractures?
d) Пересказать текст.
3) Работа над презентацией:
a) чтение текста слайдов по цепочке;
b) работа с незнакомой лексикой (со словарем);
c) запись новой информации по теме в тетрадь;
d) контроль знаний материалов презентации.
4) Выполнение грамматических упражнений в
рабочей тетради с последующей проверкой:
Тема: “Глагол в Present Simple”
1. Поставьте глагол в нужной форме Present Simple:
Diana (to work) _____________ in a hospital.
Robin and Tom (to help) _______________the doctor.
I (to try) _________ to become a good student.
We always (to come) ______________to college in time.
The patient (to have) _____________a severe pain.
Molly (to study) ______________ well.
They (to help) _____________old people.
2. Сделайте предложения отрицательными:
The course of study lasts four years.
The First Moscow Medical Academy has over 70 departments.
Scientists study the effect of colour on man.
I want to be a doctor.
Students learn the so-called pre-clinical subjects.
We buy medicines and eye-glasses at the chemist’s.
3. Постройте все виды вопросов к предложениям:
These instructions are very important for patients.
Nobody likes to go to the dentist.
These boys do morning exercises every day.
3. Заключительная часть.
Подведение итогов, оценивание ответов
студентов, запись домашнего задания.
«Broken bones» redirects here. For other uses, see Broken Bones.
A bone fracture (abbreviated FRX or Fx, Fx, or #) is a medical condition in which there is a partial or complete break in the continuity of any bone in the body. In more severe cases, the bone may be broken into several fragments, known as a comminuted fracture.[1] A bone fracture may be the result of high force impact or stress, or a minimal trauma injury as a result of certain medical conditions that weaken the bones, such as osteoporosis, osteopenia, bone cancer, or osteogenesis imperfecta, where the fracture is then properly termed a pathologic fracture.[2]
Bone fracture | |
---|---|
Other names | broken bone, bone break |
Internal and external views of an arm with a compound fracture, both before and after surgery | |
Specialty | Orthopedics |
Diagnostic method | X-ray, MRI |
Signs and symptomsEdit
Although bone tissue contains no pain receptors, a bone fracture is painful for several reasons:[3]
- Breaking in the continuity of the periosteum, with or without similar discontinuity in endosteum, as both contain multiple pain receptors.
- Edema and hematoma of nearby soft tissues caused by ruptured bone marrow evokes pressure pain.
- Involuntary muscle spasms trying to hold bone fragments in place.
Damage to adjacent structures such as nerves, muscles or blood vessels,[4] spinal cord, and nerve roots (for spine fractures), or cranial contents (for skull fractures) may cause other specific signs and symptoms.[citation needed]
ComplicationsEdit
An old fracture with nonunion of the fracture fragments
Some fractures may lead to serious complications including a condition known as compartment syndrome. If not treated, eventually, compartment syndrome may require amputation of the affected limb. Other complications may include non-union, where the fractured bone fails to heal or mal-union, where the fractured bone heals in a deformed manner. One form of malunion is the malrotation of a bone, which is especially common after femoral and tibial fractures.[5]
Complications of fractures may be classified into three broad groups, depending upon their time of occurrence. These are as follows –
- Immediate complications – occurs at the time of the fracture.
- Early complications – occurring in the initial few days after the fracture.
- Late complications – occurring a long time after the fracture.
Immediate | Early | Late |
---|---|---|
Systemic
|
Systemic
|
Imperfect union of the fracture
|
Local
|
Local
|
Others
|
PathophysiologyEdit
The natural process of healing a fracture starts when the injured bone and surrounding tissues bleed, forming a fracture hematoma. The blood coagulates to form a blood clot situated between the broken fragments.[6] Within a few days, blood vessels grow into the jelly-like matrix of the blood clot. The new blood vessels bring phagocytes to the area, which gradually removes the non-viable material. The blood vessels also bring fibroblasts in the walls of the vessels and these multiply and produce collagen fibres. In this way, the blood clot is replaced by a matrix of collagen. Collagen’s rubbery consistency allows bone fragments to move only a small amount unless severe or persistent force is applied.[citation needed]
At this stage, some of the fibroblasts begin to lay down bone matrix in the form of collagen monomers. These monomers spontaneously assemble to form the bone matrix, for which bone crystals (calcium hydroxyapatite) are deposited in amongst, in the form of insoluble crystals. This mineralization of the collagen matrix stiffens it and transforms it into bone. In fact, bone is a mineralized collagen matrix; if the mineral is dissolved out of bone, it becomes rubbery. Healing bone callus on average is sufficiently mineralized to show up on X-ray within 6 weeks in adults and less in children. This initial «woven» bone does not have the strong mechanical properties of mature bone. By a process of remodelling, the woven bone is replaced by mature «lamellar» bone. The whole process may take up to 18 months, but in adults, the strength of the healing bone is usually 80% of normal by 3 months after the injury.[citation needed]
Several factors may help or hinder the bone healing process. For example, tobacco smoking hinders the process of bone healing,[7] and adequate nutrition (including calcium intake) will help the bone healing process. Weight-bearing stress on bone, after the bone has healed sufficiently to bear the weight, also builds bone strength.
Although there are theoretical concerns about NSAIDs slowing the rate of healing, there is not enough evidence to warrant withholding the use of this type analgesic in simple fractures.[8]
Effects of smokingEdit
Smokers generally have lower bone density than non-smokers, so they have a much higher risk of fractures. There is also evidence that smoking delays bone healing.[9]
DiagnosisEdit
Radiography to identify possible fractures after a knee injury
A bone fracture may be diagnosed based on the history given and the physical examination performed. Radiographic imaging often is performed to confirm the diagnosis. Under certain circumstances, radiographic examination of the nearby joints is indicated in order to exclude dislocations and fracture-dislocations. In situations where projectional radiography alone is insufficient, Computed Tomography (CT) or Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) may be indicated.[citation needed]
ClassificationEdit
Compare healthy bone with different types of fractures:
(a) closed fracture
(b) open fracture
(c) transverse fracture
(d) spiral fracture
(e) comminuted fracture
(f) impacted fracture
(g) greenstick fracture
(h) oblique fracture
Open ankle fracture with luxation
Periprosthetic fracture of left femur
In orthopedic medicine, fractures are classified in various ways. Historically they are named after the physician who first described the fracture conditions, however, there are more systematic classifications as well.[citation needed]
They may be divided into stable versus unstable depending on the likelihood that they may shift further.[citation needed]
MechanismEdit
- Traumatic fracture – a fracture due to sustained trauma. e.g., fractures caused by a fall, road traffic accident, fight, etc.
- Pathologic fracture – a fracture through a bone that has been made weak by some underlying disease is called pathological fracture. e.g., a fracture through a bone weakened by metastasis. Osteoporosis is the most common cause of pathological fracture.
- Periprosthetic fracture – a fracture at the point of mechanical weakness at the end of an implant.
Soft-tissue involvementEdit
- Closed/simple fractures are those in which the overlying skin is intact[10]
- Open/compound fractures involve wounds that communicate with the fracture, or where fracture hematoma is exposed, and may thus expose bone to contamination. Open injuries carry a higher risk of infection. Reports indicate an incidence of infection after internal fixation of closed fracture of 1-2%, rising to 30% in open fractures.[11]
- Clean fracture
- Contaminated fracture
DisplacementEdit
- Non-displaced
- Displaced
- Translated, or ad latus, with sideways displacement.[12]
- Angulated
- Rotated
- Shortened, a reduction in overall bone length when displaced fracture fragments overlap
Fracture patternEdit
- Linear fracture – a fracture that is parallel to the bone’s long axis
- Transverse fracture – a fracture that is at a right angle to the bone’s long axis
- Oblique fracture – a fracture that is diagonal to a bone’s long axis (more than 30°)
- Spiral fracture – a fracture where at least one part of the bone has been twisted
- Compression fracture/wedge fracture – usually occurs in the vertebrae, for example when the front portion of a vertebra in the spine collapses due to osteoporosis (a medical condition which causes bones to become brittle and susceptible to fracture, with or without trauma)
- Impacted fracture – a fracture caused when bone fragments are driven into each other
- Avulsion fracture – a fracture where a fragment of bone is separated from the main mass
FragmentsEdit
- Incomplete fracture – a fracture in which the bone fragments are still partially joined, in such cases, there is a crack in the osseous tissue that does not completely traverse the width of the bone.
- Complete fracture – a fracture in which bone fragments separate completely.
- Comminuted fracture – a fracture in which the bone has broken into several pieces.
Anatomical locationEdit
An anatomical classification may begin with specifying the involved body part, such as the head or arm, followed by more specific localization. Fractures that have additional definition criteria than merely localization often may be classified as subtypes of fractures, such as a Holstein-Lewis fracture being a subtype of a humerus fracture. Most typical examples in an orthopaedic classification given in the previous section cannot be classified appropriately into any specific part of an anatomical classification, however, as they may apply to multiple anatomical fracture sites.
- Skull fracture
- Basilar skull fracture
- Blowout fracture – a fracture of the walls or floor of the orbit
- Mandibular fracture
- Nasal fracture
- Le Fort fracture of skull – facial fractures involving the maxillary bone and surrounding structures in a usually bilateral and either horizontal, pyramidal, or transverse way.
- Spinal fracture
- Cervical fracture
- Fracture of C1, including Jefferson fracture
- Fracture of C2, including Hangman’s fracture
- Flexion teardrop fracture – a fracture of the anteroinferior aspect of a cervical vertebral
- Clay-shoveler fracture – fracture through the spinous process of a vertebra occurring at any of the lower cervical or upper thoracic vertebrae
- Burst fracture – in which a vertebra breaks from a high-energy axial load
- Compression fracture – a collapse of a vertebra, often in the form of wedge fractures due to larger compression anteriorly
- Chance fracture – compression injury to the anterior portion of a vertebral body with concomitant distraction injury to posterior elements
- Holdsworth fracture – an unstable fracture dislocation of the thoraco lumbar junction of the spine
- Cervical fracture
- Rib fracture
- Sternal fracture
- Shoulder fracture
- Clavicle fracture
- Scapular fracture
- Arm fracture
- Humerus fracture (fracture of upper arm)
- Supracondylar fracture
- Holstein-Lewis fracture – a fracture of the distal third of the humerus resulting in entrapment of the radial nerve
- Forearm fracture
- Ulnar fracture
- Monteggia fracture – a fracture of the proximal third of the ulna with the dislocation of the head of the radius
- Hume fracture – a fracture of the olecranon with an associated anterior dislocation of the radial head
- Radius fracture
- Essex-Lopresti fracture – a fracture of the radial head with concomitant dislocation of the distal radio-ulnar joint with disruption of the interosseous membrane[13]
- Distal radius fracture
- Galeazzi fracture – a fracture of the radius with dislocation of the distal radioulnar joint
- Colles’ fracture – a distal fracture of the radius with dorsal (posterior) displacement of the wrist and hand
- Smith’s fracture – a distal fracture of the radius with volar (ventral) displacement of the wrist and hand
- Barton’s fracture – an intra-articular fracture of the distal radius with dislocation of the radiocarpal joint
- Ulnar fracture
- Humerus fracture (fracture of upper arm)
- Hand fracture
- Scaphoid fracture
- Rolando fracture – a comminuted intra-articular fracture through the base of the first metacarpal bone
- Bennett’s fracture – a fracture of the base of the first metacarpal bone which extends into the carpometacarpal (CMC) joint [14]
- Boxer’s fracture – a fracture at the neck of a metacarpal
- Broken finger – a fracture of the carpal phalanges
- Pelvic fracture
- Fracture of the hip bone
- Duverney fracture – an isolated pelvic fracture involving only the iliac wing
- Femoral fracture
- Hip fracture (anatomically a fracture of the femur bone and not the hip bone)
- Patella fracture
- Crus fracture
- Tibia fracture
- Pilon fracture
- Tibial plateau fracture
- Bumper fracture – a fracture of the lateral tibial plateau caused by a forced valgus applied to the knee
- Segond fracture – an avulsion fracture of the lateral tibial condyle
- Gosselin fracture – a fractures of the tibial plafond into anterior and posterior fragments [15]
- Toddler’s fracture – an undisplaced and spiral fracture of the distal third to distal half of the tibia [16]
- Fibular fracture
- Maisonneuve fracture – a spiral fracture of the proximal third of the fibula associated with a tear of the distal tibiofibular syndesmosis and the interosseous membrane
- Le Fort fracture of ankle – a vertical fracture of the antero-medial part of the distal fibula with avulsion of the anterior tibiofibular ligament[15]
- Bosworth fracture – a fracture with an associated fixed posterior dislocation of the distal fibular fragment that becomes trapped behind the posterior tibial tubercle; the injury is caused by severe external rotation of the ankle [17]
- Combined tibia and fibula fracture
- Trimalleolar fracture – involving the lateral malleolus, medial malleolus, and the distal posterior aspect of the tibia
- Bimalleolar fracture – involving the lateral malleolus and the medial malleolus
- Pott’s fracture
- Tibia fracture
- Foot fracture
- Lisfranc fracture – in which one or all of the metatarsals are displaced from the tarsus[18]
- Jones fracture – a fracture of the proximal end of the fifth metatarsal
- March fracture – a fracture of the distal third of one of the metatarsals occurring because of recurrent stress
- Cuneiform fracture – a fracture of one of the three cuneiform bones typically due to direct blow, axial load, or avulsion [19]
- Calcaneal fracture – a fracture of the calcaneus (heel bone)
- Broken toe – a fracture of the pedal phalanges
OTA/AO classificationEdit
The Orthopaedic Trauma Association Committee for Coding and Classification published its classification system [20] in 1996, adopting a similar system to the 1987 AO Foundation system.[21] In 2007, they extended their system,[22] unifying the two systems regarding wrist, hand, foot, and ankle fractures.
Classifications named after peopleEdit
A number of classifications are named after the person (eponymous) who developed it.
- «Denis classification» for spinal fractures [23]
- «Frykman classification» for forearm fractures (fractures of radius and ulna)
- «Gustilo open fracture classification» [24]
- «Letournel and Judet Classification» for Acetabular fractures [25]
- «Neer classification» for humerus fractures [26][27]
- Seinsheimer classification, Evans-Jensen classification, Pipkin classification, and Garden classification for hip fractures[28]
PreventionEdit
Both high- and low-force trauma can cause bone fracture injuries.[29][30] Preventive efforts to reduce motor vehicle crashes, the most common cause of high-force trauma, include reducing distractions while driving.[31] Common distractions are driving under the influence and texting or calling while driving, both of which lead to an approximate 6-fold increase in crashes.[31] Wearing a seatbelt can also reduce the likelihood of injury in a collision.[31] 30 km/h or 20 mph speed limits (as opposed to the more common intracity 50 km/h / 30 mph) also drastically reduce the risk of accident, serious injury and even death in crashes between motor vehicles and humans. Vision Zero aims to reduce traffic deaths to zero through better traffic design and other measures and to drastically reduce traffic injuries which would prevent many bone fractures.
A common cause of low-force trauma is an at-home fall.[29][30] When considering preventative efforts, the National Institute of Health (NIH) examines ways to reduce the likelihood of falling, the force of the fall, and bone fragility.[32] To prevent at-home falls they suggest keeping cords out of high-traffic areas where someone could trip, installing handrails and keeping stairways well-lit, and installing an assistive bar near the bathtub in the washroom for support.[32] To reduce the impact of a fall the NIH recommends to try falling straight down on your buttocks or onto your hands.[32]
Some sports have a relatively high risk of bone fractures as a common sports injury. Preventive measures depend to some extent on the specific sport, but learning proper technique, wearing protective gear and having a realistic estimation of one’s own capabilities and limitations can all help reduce the risk of bone fracture. In contact sports rules have been put in place to protect athlete health, such as the prohibition of unnecessary roughness in American football.
Taking calcium and vitamin D supplements can help strengthen your bones.[32] Vitamin D supplements combined with additional calcium marginally reduces the risk of hip fractures and other types of fracture in older adults; however, vitamin D supplementation alone did not reduce the risk of fractures.[33]
PatternsEdit
Photo | Type | Description | Causes | Effects |
---|---|---|---|---|
In the fingertip. More images |
Linear fracture | Parallel to the bone’s long axis | ||
more images |
Transverse fracture | At a right angle to the bone’s long axis | May occur when the bone is bent,[34]and snaps in the middle. | |
Oblique fracture | Diagonal to a bone’s long axis (more than 30°) | |||
more images |
Spiral fracture or torsion fracture | At least one part of the bone has been twisted (image shows an arm-wrestler) | Torsion on the bone[34] | May rotate, and must be reduced to heal properly |
more images |
Compression fracture/wedge fracture | Usually occurs in the vertebrae, for example when the front portion of a vertebra in the spine collapses due to osteoporosis (a medical condition which causes bones to become brittle and susceptible to fracture, with or without trauma) | ||
Impacted fracture | Bone fragments are driven into each other | |||
more images |
Avulsion fracture | A fragment of bone is separated from the main mass (image shows a Busch fracture) | ||
more images |
Comminuted fracture | The bone is shattered | often from crushing injuries[34] |
TreatmentEdit
The surgical treatment of mandibular angle fracture; fixation of the bone fragments by the plates, the principles of osteosynthesis are stability (immobility of the fragments that creates the conditions for bones coalescence) and functionality
Proximal femur nail with locking and stabilisation screws for treatment of femur fractures of left thigh
Treatment of bone fractures are broadly classified as surgical or conservative, the latter basically referring to any non-surgical procedure, such as pain management, immobilization or other non-surgical stabilization. A similar classification is open versus closed treatment, in which open treatment refers to any treatment in which the fracture site is opened surgically, regardless of whether the fracture is an open or closed fracture.[35]
Pain managementEdit
In arm fractures in children, ibuprofen has been found to be as effective as a combination of paracetamol and codeine.[36] In the ems setting it might be applicable to administer 1mg/kg of iv ketamine to achieve a dissociated state.
ImmobilizationEdit
Since bone healing is a natural process that will occur most often, fracture treatment aims to ensure the best possible function of the injured part after healing. Bone fractures typically are treated by restoring the fractured pieces of bone to their natural positions (if necessary), and maintaining those positions while the bone heals. Often, aligning the bone, called reduction, in a good position and verifying the improved alignment with an X-ray is all that is needed. This process is extremely painful without anaesthesia, about as painful as breaking the bone itself. To this end, a fractured limb usually is immobilized with a plaster or fibreglass cast or splint that holds the bones in position and immobilizes the joints above and below the fracture. When the initial post-fracture oedema or swelling goes down, the fracture may be placed in a removable brace or orthosis. If being treated with surgery, surgical nails, screws, plates, and wires are used to hold the fractured bone together more directly. Alternatively, fractured bones may be treated by the Ilizarov method which is a form of an external fixator.
Occasionally smaller bones, such as phalanges of the toes and fingers, may be treated without the cast, by buddy wrapping them, which serves a similar function to making a cast. A device called a Suzuki frame may be used in cases of deep, complex intra-articular digit fractures.[37] By allowing only limited movement, immobilization helps preserve anatomical alignment while enabling callus formation, toward the target of achieving union.
Splinting results in the same outcome as casting in children who have a distal radius fracture with little shifting.[38]
SurgeryEdit
Surgical methods of treating fractures have their own risks and benefits, but usually, surgery is performed only if conservative treatment has failed, is very likely to fail, or is likely to result in a poor functional outcome.[39] With some fractures such as hip fractures (usually caused by osteoporosis), surgery is offered routinely because non-operative treatment results in prolonged immobilisation, which commonly results in complications including chest infections, pressure sores, deconditioning, deep vein thrombosis (DVT), and pulmonary embolism, which are more dangerous than surgery.[40] When a joint surface is damaged by a fracture, surgery is also commonly recommended to make an accurate anatomical reduction and restore the smoothness of the joint.
Infection is especially dangerous in bones, due to the recrudescent nature of bone infections. Bone tissue is predominantly extracellular matrix, rather than living cells, and the few blood vessels needed to support this low metabolism are only able to bring a limited number of immune cells to an injury to fight infection. For this reason, open fractures and osteotomies call for very careful antiseptic procedures and prophylactic use of antibiotics.
Occasionally, bone grafting is used to treat a fracture.[41]
Sometimes bones are reinforced with metal.[42] These implants must be designed and installed with care. Stress shielding occurs when plates or screws carry too large of a portion of the bone’s load, causing atrophy. This problem is reduced, but not eliminated, by the use of low-modulus materials, including titanium and its alloys. The heat generated by the friction of installing hardware can accumulate easily and damage bone tissue, reducing the strength of the connections. If dissimilar metals are installed in contact with one another (i.e., a titanium plate with cobalt-chromium alloy or stainless steel screws), galvanic corrosion will result. The metal ions produced can damage the bone locally and may cause systemic effects as well.
OtherEdit
Bone stimulation with either electromagnetic or ultrasound waves may be suggested as an alternative to surgery to reduce the healing time for non-union fractures.[43][44] The proposed mechanism of action is by stimulating osteoblasts and other proteins that form bones using these modalities. The evidence supporting the use of ultrasound and shockwave therapy for improving unions is very weak[43] and it is likely that these approaches do not make a clinically significant difference for a delayed union or non-union.[45]
ChildrenEdit
In children, whose bones are still developing, there are risks of either a growth plate injury or a greenstick fracture.
- A greenstick fracture occurs due to mechanical failure on the tension side. That is since the bone is not so brittle as it would be in an adult, it does not completely fracture, but rather exhibits bowing without complete disruption of the bone’s cortex in the surface opposite the applied force.
- Growth plate injuries, as in Salter-Harris fractures, require careful treatment and accurate reduction to make sure that the bone continues to grow normally.
- Plastic deformation of the bone, in which the bone permanently bends, but does not break, also is possible in children. These injuries may require an osteotomy (bone cut) to realign the bone if it is fixed and cannot be realigned by closed methods.
- Certain fractures mainly occur in children, including fracture of the clavicle and supracondylar fracture of the humerus.[citation needed]
See alsoEdit
- Stress fracture
- Distraction osteogenesis
- Rickets
- Catagmatic
- H. Winnett Orr, U.S. Army surgeon who developed Orthopedic plaster casts
ReferencesEdit
- ^ Katherine, Abel (2013). Official CPC Certification Study Guide. American Medical Association. p. 108.
- ^ Witmer, Daniel K.; Marshall, Silas T.; Browner, Bruce D. (2016). «Emergency Care of Musculoskeletal Injuries». In Townsend, Courtney M.; Beauchamp, R. Daniel; Evers, B. Mark; Mattox, Kenneth L. (eds.). Sabiston Textbook of Surgery (20th ed.). Elsevier. pp. 462–504. ISBN 978-0-323-40163-0.
- ^ MedicineNet – Fracture Archived 2008-12-21 at the Wayback Machine Medical Author: Benjamin C. Wedro, MD, FAAEM.
- ^ Danielle Campagne (September 2022). «Overview of Fractures». mdmanuals.com.
- ^ «Compartment Syndrome». The Lecturio Medical Concept Library. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
- ^ Silva, Joana Cavaco (11 July 2018). «Bone fracture repair: Procedures, risks, and healing time». Medical News Today. William Morrison, M.D. (medical reviewer). Retrieved 21 April 2022.
- ^ Sloan, A.; Hussain, I.; Maqsood, M.; Eremin, O.; El-Sheemy, M. (2010). «The effects of smoking on fracture healing». The Surgeon. 8 (2): 111–6. doi:10.1016/j.surge.2009.10.014. PMID 20303894.
- ^ Pountos, Ippokratis; Georgouli, Theodora; Calori, Giorgio M.; Giannoudis, Peter V. (2012). «Do Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Affect Bone Healing? A Critical Analysis». The Scientific World Journal. 2012: 1–14. doi:10.1100/2012/606404. PMC 3259713. PMID 22272177.
- ^ Kanis, J. A.; Johnell, O.; Oden, A.; Johansson, H.; De Laet, C.; Eisman, J. A.; Fujiwara, S.; Kroger, H.; McCloskey, E. V.; Mellstrom, D.; Melton, L. J.; Pols, H.; Reeve, J.; Silman, A.; Tenenhouse, A. (2004). «Smoking and fracture risk: A meta-analysis». Osteoporosis International. 16 (2): 155–62. doi:10.1007/s00198-004-1640-3. PMID 15175845. S2CID 19890259.
- ^ «Simple fracture | pathology». Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
- ^ Metsemakers, WJ; Onsea, J; Neutjens, E; Steffens, E; Schuermans, A; McNally, M; Nijs, S (December 2017). «Prevention of fracture-related infection: a multidisciplinary care package». International Orthopaedics. 41 (12): 2457–2469. doi:10.1007/s00264-017-3607-y. PMID 28831576. S2CID 12894601.
- ^ Roberto Schubert. «Fractures of the extremities (general rules and nomenclature)». Radiopaedia. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
- ^ Essex Lopresti fracture Archived 2009-10-01 at the Wayback Machine at Wheeless’ Textbook of Orthopaedics online
- ^ «Bennett’s fracture-subluxation». GPnotebook.
- ^ a b Hunter, Tim B.; Peltier, Leonard F.; Lund, Pamela J. (2000). «Radiologic History Exhibit». RadioGraphics. 20 (3): 819–36. doi:10.1148/radiographics.20.3.g00ma20819. PMID 10835130.
- ^ Mellick, Larry B.; Milker, Laura; Egsieker, Erik (1999). «Childhood accidental spiral tibial (CAST) fractures». Pediatric Emergency Care. 15 (5): 307–9. doi:10.1097/00006565-199910000-00001. PMID 10532655.
- ^ Perry, C. R.; Rice, S; Rao, A; Burdge, R (1983). «Posterior fracture-dislocation of the distal part of the fibula. Mechanism and staging of injury». The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. American Volume. 65 (8): 1149–57. doi:10.2106/00004623-198365080-00016. PMID 6630259.[permanent dead link]
- ^ TheFreeDictionary Lisfranc’s fracture Citing: Mosby’s Medical Dictionary, 8th edition. Copyright 2009
- ^ Mabry LM, Patti TN, Ross MD, Bleakley CM, Gisselman AS (July 2021). «Isolated Medial Cuneiform Fractures: A Systematic Search and Qualitative Analysis of Case Studies». J Am Podiatr Med Assoc. 111 (4): 1–9. doi:10.7547/20-047. PMID 34478529. S2CID 225705519.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ «Fracture and dislocation compendium. Orthopaedic Trauma Association Committee for Coding and Classification». Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma. 10 Suppl 1: v–ix, 1–154. 1996. PMID 8814583.
- ^ Müller ME, Nazarian S, Koch P (1987). Classification AO des fractures. Tome I. Les os longs. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.[page needed]
- ^ Marsh, J. L.; Slongo, T. F.; Agel, J; Broderick, J. S.; Creevey, W; Decoster, T. A.; Prokuski, L; Sirkin, M. S.; Ziran, B; Henley, B; Audigé, L (2007). «Fracture and dislocation classification compendium — 2007: Orthopaedic Trauma Association classification, database and outcomes committee». Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma. 21 (10 Suppl): S1–133. doi:10.1097/00005131-200711101-00001. PMID 18277234. S2CID 24535478.
- ^ «Denis classification of spinal fractures». GPnotebook.
- ^ Rüedi, etc. all; Thomas P. Rüedi; Richard E. Buckley; Christopher G. Moran (2007). AO principles of fracture management, Volume 1. Thieme. p. 96. ISBN 978-3-13-117442-0.
- ^ «Fractures of the Acetabulum». wheelessonline.com. Archived from the original on 26 September 2009.
- ^ Mourad, L (1997). «Neer classification of fractures of the proximal humerus». Orthopedic Nursing. 16 (2): 76. PMID 9155417.
- ^ Proximal Humerus Fractures at eMedicine
- ^ «Hip Fractures». The Lecturio Medical Concept Library. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
- ^ a b «Open Fractures — OrthoInfo — AAOS». Retrieved 3 December 2018.
- ^ a b Court-Brown, Charles M.; Bugler, Kate E.; Clement, Nicholas D.; Duckworth, Andrew D.; McQueen, Margaret M. (June 2012). «The epidemiology of open fractures in adults. A 15-year review». Injury. 43 (6): 891–897. doi:10.1016/j.injury.2011.12.007. ISSN 1879-0267. PMID 22204774.
- ^ a b c Sidwell, Richard; Matar, Maher M.; Sakran, Joseph V. (1 October 2017). «Trauma Education and Prevention». Surgical Clinics of North America. 97 (5): 1185–1197. doi:10.1016/j.suc.2017.06.010. ISSN 0039-6109. PMID 28958365.
- ^ a b c d «Preventing Falls and Related Fractures | NIH Osteoporosis and Related Bone Diseases National Resource Center». www.bones.nih.gov. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
- ^ Avenell, Alison; Mak, Jenson C. S.; O’Connell, Dianne (14 April 2014). «Vitamin D and vitamin D analogues for preventing fractures in post-menopausal women and older men». The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2021 (4): CD000227. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD000227.pub4. ISSN 1469-493X. PMC 7032685. PMID 24729336.
- ^ a b c McDaniel, Dalton J.; Rehman, Uzma H. (2 November 2021). «Phalanx Fractures of the Hand». StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing. PMID 32491557 – via PubMed.
- ^ «Overview of Bone Fractures». The Lecturio Medical Concept Library. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
- ^ Drendel, Amy L.; Gorelick, Marc H.; Weisman, Steven J.; Lyon, Roger; Brousseau, David C.; Kim, Michael K. (2009). «A Randomized Clinical Trial of Ibuprofen Versus Paracetamol with Codeine for Acute Pediatric Arm Fracture Pain». Annals of Emergency Medicine. 54 (4): 553–60. doi:10.1016/j.annemergmed.2009.06.005. PMID 19692147.
- ^ Keramidas EG, Miller G (October 2005). «The Suzuki frame for complex intraarticular fractures of the thumb». Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. 116 (5): 1326–31. doi:10.1097/01.prs.0000181786.39062.0b. PMID 16217475. S2CID 31890854.
- ^ Boutis, K.; Willan, A.; Babyn, P.; Goeree, R.; Howard, A. (2010). «Cast versus splint in children with minimally angulated fractures of the distal radius: A randomized controlled trial». Canadian Medical Association Journal. 182 (14): 1507–12. doi:10.1503/cmaj.100119. PMC 2950182. PMID 20823169.
- ^ «Fractures». Johns Hopkins Medicine. 28 February 2020. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
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- ^ Klokkevold PR, Jovanovic SA (2002). «Advanced Implant Surgery and Bone Grafting Techniques». In Newman MG, Takei HM, Carranza FA (eds.). Carranza’s Clinical Periodontology (9th ed.). W.B. Saunders. pp. 907–8. ISBN 9780721683317.
- ^ «Fractures». Johns Hopkins Medicine. 28 February 2020. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
- ^ a b Leighton, R.; Watson, J.T; Giannoudis, P.; Papakostidis, C.; Harrison, A.; Steen, R.G. (May 2017). «Healing of fracture nonunions treated with low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS): A systematic review and meta-analysis». Injury. 48 (7): 1339–1347. doi:10.1016/j.injury.2017.05.016. PMID 28532896.
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External linksEdit
- Authoritative information in orthopaedic surgery American Association of Orthopedic Surgeons (AAOS)
- Radiographic Atlas of Fracture
- Top Definitions
- Synonyms
- Quiz
- Related Content
- Examples
- British
- Scientific
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
[ frak-cher ]
/ ˈfræk tʃər /
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
noun
the act of breaking; state of being broken.
a break, breach, or split.
the characteristic manner of breaking: a material of unpredictable fracture.
the characteristic appearance of a broken surface, as of a mineral.
verb (used with object), frac·tured, frac·tur·ing.
to cause or to suffer a fracture in (a bone, etc.).
to break or crack.
Slang. to amuse highly or cause to laugh heartily; delight: The new comic really fractured the audience.
verb (used without object), frac·tured, frac·tur·ing.
to become fractured; break: a mineral that does not fracture easily.
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Origin of fracture
1375–1425; late Middle English <Middle French <Latin frāctūra a breach, cleft, fracture, equivalent to frāct(us) (past participle of frangere to break) + -ūra-ure
OTHER WORDS FROM fracture
frac·tur·a·ble, adjectivefrac·tur·al, adjectivefrac·tur·er, nounpost·frac·ture, adjective, noun
re·frac·tur·a·ble, adjectivere·frac·ture, verb, re·frac·tured, re·frac·tur·ing.un·frac·tured, adjective
Words nearby fracture
fractionator, fractionize, fractious, fractocumulus, fractostratus, fracture, fracture zone, fractus, frae, fraenulum, fraenum
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Words related to fracture
crack, fissure, wound, breach, cleavage, cleft, discontinuity, disjunction, displacement, fragmentation, gap, mutilation, opening, rent, rift, schism, severance, splinter, split
How to use fracture in a sentence
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Those small fractures allow the blades to absorb impacts without completely snapping, explains Jesus Rivera.
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Brees believes that the fractures on his left side occurred during the game against the Buccaneers two weeks ago and that those on his right side came in last week’s game against the 49ers.
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Shifting to point-of-care imaging also frees up CAT scanners for essential uses such as identifying bone fractures, tumors or cancers.
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Both are to miss significant time, Garoppolo with an ankle injury and Kittle with a foot fracture.
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Those small, healable fractures allow the blades to absorb impacts without completely snapping, explains Jesus Rivera, an engineer at UC Irvine.
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«My wife and I have been married for nineteen years,» says Palmer, mulling the stress-fracture in his family life.
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Facebook has—to fracture an old phrase—just closed the barn door after a billion cows already departed the premises.
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And the truth is, I got way more opportunities out of Half Nelson than I did out of Fracture.
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Ms. Kuang suffered multiple injuries, including a skull fracture, and two and a half months later she still has trouble walking.
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And contemporaneous observers predicted that South Africa would fracture, that a civil war would roil for the next decade.
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Very compact and fine-grained reddish granular quartz, with a glistening lustre, and flat conchoidal fracture.
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When the sound is over, he may not be able to see a trace of the fracture, which at first is very narrow.
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The parts barely touched each other, though in cases of human fracture the bones sometimes get drawn past.
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It was no comminuted fracture I had to deal with, but a very simple case of simple fracture.
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One of the projections of the Little Douvre had made a fracture in the starboard side of the hull.
British Dictionary definitions for fracture
noun
verb
to break or cause to break; split
to break or crack (a bone) or (of a bone) to become broken or cracked
to tear (a cartilage) or (of a cartilage) to become torn
Derived forms of fracture
fracturable, adjectivefractural, adjective
Word Origin for fracture
C15: from Old French, from Latin fractūra, from frangere to break
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Scientific definitions for fracture
A break or rupture in bone tissue.♦ A comminuted fracture results in more than two fragments.♦ Although most fractures are caused by a direct blow or sudden, twisting force, stress fractures result from repetitive physical activity.♦ In an incomplete fracture, the fracture line does not completely traverse the bone.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.