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Fracture Repair Anatomy & Physiology.

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Presentation on theme: "Fracture Repair Anatomy & Physiology."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fracture Repair Anatomy & Physiology

2 Fracture Repair After reduction, bone is immobilized
Fractures are treated by reduction: the realignment of broken bone ends Closed reduction: put back into normal alignment by doctor Open reduction: bones put back in normal alignment and secured with pins or wires – surgery required After reduction, bone is immobilized

3 Fracture Repair Internally, the bone begins to heal in four major steps A hematoma forms: since blood vessels are ruptured during the break, a blood-filled swelling (hematoma) forms. The break is splinted by a fibrocartilage callus. New capillaries grow at the site of damage. Dead tissue disposed of (phagocytosis). Conn. tissue cells form fibrocartilage callus, closing the gap in the break.

4 Fracture repair 3. Bony callus forms: more osteoclasts & -blasts migrate to area, multiply, and gradually replace fibrocartilage with spongy bone, forming the bony callus. 4. Bone remodeling occurs: bone callus is remodeled, bringing bone back to normal

5 Abnormal Spine Curves Anatomy & Physiology

6 Kyphosis Exaggeration of thoracic curve,
Can be caused by degeneration of intervertebral discs, rickets, or poor posture

7 Lordosis An exaggeration of the lumbar curve, also called a swayback
Can be caused by increased weight gain during pregnancy, extreme obesity, poor posture, rickets

8 Scoliosis A sideways bending of the vertebral column, usually in the thoracic region May be a result of malformed vertebrae, paralysis of muscles on one side, poor posture, one leg being shorter than the other


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