Fractures- Intro Flashcards
What is a fracture?
Discontinuity in structure of a bone
What are the 3 main types?
Traumatic- high force in a non weakened bone causes fracture
Pathological- non traumatic force due to weakened bone
Stress fracture- repetitive sub maximal force causing fracture in non-weakened bone
What are the risk factors?
Osteoporosis Osteomalacia Pagets Primary/metastatic neoplasia Bine cysts Congenital disease e.g. osteogenesis imperfecta
What are important assessment points?
History of injury Pain -sharp esp at time of injury -worsened on bending, compression, weight bearing -LoC from pain
Cannot use affected limb Physical deformity Bruising Swelling Tenderness Crepitus
Distal neurovascular status
-if impaired= emergency
Look for associated injuries
What is the mechanism of fracture repair?
1) Inflammation
- days 1-7
- Fracture ends bleed
- leads to haematoma formation around fracture site and inflammatory response creating a fibrin and capillary network
2) Soft callus
- 1-3wks
- as movement at fracture ends reduce the vascular network expands
- fibrous tissue replaces haematoma
- subperiosteal new bone formation begins
3) Hard callus
- 1-4months
- calcification of soft callus forms rigid calcified tissue
4) Remodelling
- once fracture is solidly united
- remodelling takes place over following months/yrs
- new woven bone replaced by lamella bone and medullary canal restored
This is if it is an unstable condition i.e. fracture is in plaster
If surgery has happened then the fracture is stable and can heal without callus formation