Fractures Flashcards
What are examples of how fractures are classified?
- Location in the bone
- Angle of the fracture
- Number of fragments
- Skin is open or closed
- Skin is stable or unstable
- Geometry: transverse, oblique, spiral, comminuted, vertical
- Site: base, shaft, neck, or head
- Deformity: rotational, angular, or with shortening (corresponds with stable vs unstable)
What is a comminuted fracture?
- Involves shattering of bone into pieces; usually takes the longest to heal
What is a compound or open g fracture?
- Bone pierces or lacerates through the skin
What are examples of incomplete fractures?
- Greenstick fracture: characterized by a small crack and is most commonly found in children
- Hairline fracture: happens frequently in athletes
What are examples of complete fractures?
- Simple fracture: transverse, oblique, spiral, impacted
- Fractures can be angulated, displaced, distracted, or pathological
- Growth plate fractures through the epiphyseal plate
What is the general order fracture healing?
Inflammatory phase > regeneration > remodeling phase
What is the timeline for the inflammatory phase after a fracture?
- 1-2 weeks
- Hematoma forms on the fracture site tissues come together to begin bone repair
What is the timeline for the regeneration phase after a fracture?
- 2-6 weeks
- Healing takes place: regrowth of vascular tissue, soft callus turns into hard callus and direct union
What is the timeline for the remodeling phase after a fracture?
- 6 weeks to a year
- Strong bone tissue/ossification is at the fracture site
- Rigidity of callus dramatically improves between 6-8 weeks
T/F: ultrasound should not be applied over a fracture or epiphyseal plate.
True because it could stunt growth
What factors affect the healing of a fracture?
- Age
- Presence of other disease
- Overall health
- Type of fracture and fracture characteristics
- Amount of damage
- Bone involved and location of fracture
- Method of fixation (e.g., casted, surgery, pins, repositioning - open or closed)
- Nutrition
- Circulation
- Patient compliance
What is an OTs role during fracture management?
- Splinting to provide protection, to immobilize, or to gain ROM
- Edema control via elevation, massage, ice (edema can cause scarring or turn into fibrotic tissue)
- Pain control/modalities (e.g., TENS, cryotherapy, hot packs, ultrasound, NMES)
- Regain ROM via gentle AROM, AAROM, PROM, and stretching
- Regain sensation:
- Desensitization, Fluidotherapy
- Neuromuscular reeducation
- Proprioception (especially if there is ligament damage) and kinesthesia
- Strengthening when healing of bone allows
*Always start with AROM when there is a fracture!
What is included during an OT evaluation at the acute stage of healing?
- Pain level
- Edema
- Associated soft tissue injury
- ROM in involved or adjacent joints depending on precautions
- Inspect for any deformity or mal-alignment
What are OT goals for a fracture?
- Protect the fracture via splinting and patient education
- Edema and soft tissue swelling/inflammation reduction
- Pain reduction
- ROM/mobility improvement
- Strength increased to functional level (LTG)
- Ability to perform previous occupational tasks (LTG)