Management of specific fractures Flashcards
LO
Bones anatomy and physiology
Bone overview
Reservoir for stem cells and also lipids and minerals like calcium, so not just structural-also physiological properties
Bone types:
Bone types:
Flat bones eg sternum, skull are bones that protect organs eg heart brain
Long bones-facilitate movement and they are important sites of haematopoeisis so they are unstable if break them
Short bones-as long as wide as don’t have diaphysis
Sesamoid-embedded within tendons-allows for dynamic action, as otherwise would just be one tendon rather than an attachement point halfway through, also protects tendon overstretching.
Bone: anatomy
Epiphysis-end bit which has articular surface
Metaphysis have epiphyseal line where growth plate would sit pre puberty
In epiphysis have spongey bone and in cortex have compact bones
In diaphysis of lng bone, have a medullary cavity of yellow bone marrow
The periosteum, inaddition to arteries, supply blood and nutrients to bone particularly through nutrient arteries.
Bone: ultrastructure
Can have woven (primary bone) first formed in foetal development and also get it in fracture when get bone union
temporary structure, which is replaced by lamellar bone
Bone: ultrastructure
Composition of bone
Important stores of minerals and lipids
Poor vitamin D and calcium will cause bones to suffer
Collagen type 1
Osteoblasts synthesise osteoid, osteocytes are osteobasts that get deposited in osteoid
Osteoclasts are multinucleate cells, that resorb bone and reelase lysosome enzymes and hydrogen ions. The way to distinguish this is the fact it is multinucleate
Osteoprogenitor cells also present
Bone: ossification
2 ways to get bone to grow-
endochondral-temporary cartilage scaffold, replaced by osteoid secreted by osteoblast eg proximal femur, mainly provides length to bone so thin long bones will be this type
Intramembranous-bone forming directly onto fibrous tissue, so think of flatter bones eg temporal and scalpula
Bone: remodelling:
Cutting cone-
- Primarily a mechanism to remodel bone
- Osteoclasts at the front of the cutting cone remove bone
- Trailing osteoblasts lay down new bone
-Undertaken by osteoclasts-get removal by multinucleate osteoclast cells to increase blood calcium levels, but also get production by osteoblasts
Cutting cone-get cutting tip of osteoclasts which cuts bones, followed by trailing series of osteoblasts which then become entombed to form osteocytes. These form concentric lamellae for bone
Bone disorders
- Child=rickets
- Adult=osteomalacia
- Osteogenesis imperfecta=abnormla collagen synthesis
Fracture management:
Fractures-definition
=discontinuity of the bone
4 main criteria
Orientation, Location, Displacement and skin penetration (ie open or closed)
OLDS
eg transverse fracture of proximal femur, it’s displaced and closed
Fracture classification
Wber-for ankle
Universal classification system
AO/OTA classification
Looks at bone and gives it a number eg humerus for 1, number for location eg proximal humeraus is 11, and subgroup type eg 11a will be intrarticular to demarcate fracture.
Fracture healing-primary
Cutter cone not only important for remodelling but also healing
Primary-direct bone healing generally intramembranous healing, very small gap and almost no movement eg less than 500nm, this is very slow process and to have no movement is difficult.
Fracture healing-secondary
Secondary-endochondral healing forms fibrocartilage onto which bone is laid down
Haematoma-damaged blood vessels bleed and neutrophils and cytokines enter area and signal for macrophages, then get soft callus formation, then get calcified matrix deposited as osteoblasts are bought in by blood vessels, then get remodelling (can take 1-2 years to occur)