Fracture Repair Flashcards
What are the directions of fracture lines?
Transverse Oblique (short or long) Spiral Comminuted, reducible Comminuted, nonreducible
What is another name for a cortical fracture?
Green stick
What do you calll a fracture of the tibia that involves the distractive forces of the patellar tendon on the fragmented piece?
Tibial tuberosity avulsion
What is a closed fracture?
No communication with external environment
What is an open fracture?
At some point, developed communication with the external environment
Classify this open fracture
Bone penetrating through skin
Laceration <1cm
Clean
Type 1
Classify this open fracture
External object penetrates soft tissue
Laceration >1cm
Mild soft tissue trauma
Type 2
Classify this open fracture?
Vast soft tissue laceration
Soft tissue available for closure
Type 3a
Classify this open fracture
Extensive soft tissue injury and loss
Bone exposure and stripped periosteum
Type 3b
Classify this open fracture
Arterial supply damaged
Required arterial repair for limb salvage
Type 3 c
What are causes of fractures?
Direct insult
Indirect insult — force transmitted though bone to distant point (femoral neck, tibial tuberosity)
Pathological — weakened bone (neoplasia or nutritional)
Repeated stress — metacarpal and metatarsal in racing greyhounds
What type of force causes a transverse fracture?
Bending
What type of force causes a reducible comminuted fracture?
Bending and axial compression
What type of force causes a oblique fracture?
Axial compression
What type of forces cause a spiral fracture?
Torsion