Fractures and Causes
A fracture is a broken bone or a break of any size on the bone (Giza 2009, Vorvick 2009, Parmet 2010). The cause is the application or exertion of physical force, which is stronger than the bone itself. Fractures are common occurrences and experience. The average person is said to experience two fractures in his lifetime. The risk depends partly on age. It is quite common in childhood although fractures during childhood are, as a rule, less serious than those in adulthood. This is because bones become more brittle with age. Fractures result from injuries, osteoporosis, tumors near the bone, and prolonged walking or running. The severity depends on the location and extent of damage to the bone and surrounding tissues. Unless treated promptly, complications may develop. Recuperation depends on the person's age and health and the type of fracture. Healing may take a few weeks if the fracture is minor and occurs in a child. On the other hand, a serious fracture in someone older may take months to resolve (Giza, Vorvick, Parmet).
Descriptions and Types
A fracture may be described as simple, comminuted, open or closed (Parmet 2010). It is simple if the damage is in one place. It is comminuted if it occurs in many locations and has at least 3 bone fragments. It is open or compound if the broken bone is exposed. If the skin is intact, the fracture is described as closed. It is undisplaced if the broken bone pieces are in alignment. It is displaced if these bone pieces are not in alignment (Parmet).
The types include greenstick, transverse, oblique, comminuted, impacted, pathologic, and stress fractures (Giza 2009, Gould 2006, Better Health 2004). A greenstick fracture is an incomplete type in which the bone is bent. It typically occurs in children. A transverse fracture is at a right angle to the axis of the bone. An oblique fracture is curved or sloping. Bone fragments are cut into several pieces in a comminuted fracture. In an impacted or buckle fracture,...
Skull Fracture PATHOLOGIES AND PROCEDURES The skull is hard, resilient and provides excellent protection to the brain (Heller, 2012; Khan, 2013). But a severe head injury caused by a blow or impact can fracture the skull and even injure the brain. Damage to the brain can be in the form of damage to the nervous system tissue and bleeding. It can also be in the form of blood clots under the skull
Epidemiological Study on Falls This is a matched cohort study of 754 volunteer elders who live together in a community in New Haven, Connecticut in determining damaging effects of injurious falls among the disabled ones (Gill et al., 2013). It sought to discover the connection between hip fractures and the damaging effects. Of this total number of participants, 122 were hospitalized patients for injurious falls, 59 of whom were hip-fractured
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The conclusion of Marks (2010) was that nominal physical activity and exercise on the level of the individual can help in reducing the prevalence of hips fractures and should be encouraged. "Young adults everywhere need to be appraised of their future risk for hip fracture in later life and encouraged to follow healthy active lifestyles." (p.12) Discussion questions: 1. Quoting Wehre and Magaziner (2003), Marks (2010) says that annual incidence of hip
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