6. Fracture and Repair of Bone
- A fracture is any break in a bone.
Fractures are named according to their
- severity,
- the shape or position of the fracture line, or
- even the physician who first described them.
- Open (compound) fracture:
- The broken ends of the bone protrude through the skin
2. Closed (simple) fracture
- does not break the skin.
- The bone is splintered, crushed, or broken into pieces, and
- smaller bone fragments lie between the two main fragments.
- This is the most difficult fracture to treat.
4. Greenstick fracture:
- A partial fracture in which one side of the bone is broken and the other side bends;
- occurs only in children,
- whose bones are not yet fully ossified and contain more organic material than inorganic material
5. Impacted fracture:
- One end of the fractured bone is forcefully driven into the interior of the other
6. Pott’s fracture:
- A fracture of the distal end of the lateral leg bone (fibula), with serious injury of the distal tibial articulation
- A fracture of the distal end of the lateral forearm bone (radius) in which the distal fragment is displaced posteriorly
- In some cases, a bone may fracture without visibly breaking.
- is a series of microscopic fissures in bone that forms without any evidence of injury to other tissues.
- In healthy adults, stress fractures result from repeated, strenuous activities such as running, jumping, or aerobic dancing.
- Stress fractures are quite painful
- and also result from disease processes that disrupt normal bone calcification, such as osteoporosis .
- About 25% of stress fractures involve the tibia.
- Although standard x-ray images often fail to reveal the presence of stress fractures, they show up clearly in a bone scan.
- The repair of a bone fracture involves the following steps
- Blood vessels crossing the fracture line are broken.
- As blood leaks from the torn ends of the vessels, a mass of blood (usually clotted) forms around the site of the fracture.
- This mass of blood, called a fracture hematoma hemat- blood; -oma tumor),
- usually forms 6 to 8 hours after the injury.
- Because the circulation of blood stops at the site where the fracture hematoma forms, nearby bone cells die.
- Swelling and inflammation occur in response to dead bone cells, producing additional cellular debris.
- Phagocytes (neutrophils and macrophages) and osteoclasts begin to remove the dead or damaged tissue in and around the fracture hematoma.
- This stage may last up to several weeks.
2. Fibrocartilaginous callus formation.
- Fibroblasts from the periosteum invade the fracture site and produce collagen fibers.
- In addition, cells from the periosteum develop into chondroblasts
- and begin to produce fibrocartilage in this region.
- These events lead to the development of a fibrocartilaginous callus a mass of repair tissue consisting of collagen fibers and cartilage that bridges the broken ends of the bone.
- Formation of the fibrocartilaginous callus takes about 3 weeks.
3. Bony callus formation.
- In areas closer to well-vascularized healthy bone tissue, osteogenic cells develop into osteoblasts, which begin to produce spongy bone trabeculae.
- The trabeculae join living and dead portions of the original bone fragments.
- In time, the fibrocartilage is converted to spongy bone, and the callus is then referred to as a bony callus.
- The bony callus lasts about 3 to 4 months.
- The final phase of fracture repair is bone remodeling of the callus.
- Dead portions of the original fragments of broken bone are gradually resorbed by osteoclasts.
- Compact bone replaces spongy bone around the periphery of the fracture.
- Sometimes, the repair process is so thorough that the fracture line is undetectable, even in a radiograph (x-ray).
- However, a thickened area on the surface of the bone remains as evidence of a healed fracture.
- Although bone has a generous blood supply, healing sometimes takes months.
- The calcium and phosphorus needed to strengthen and harden new bone are deposited only gradually,
- and bone cells generally grow and reproduce slowly.
- The temporary disruption in their blood supply also helps explain the slowness of healing of severely fractured bones.
CLINICAL CONNECTION
Treatments for Fractures
- Treatments for fractures vary according to age, type of fracture, and the bone involved.
The ultimate goals of fracture treatment are
- realignment of the bone fragments,
- immobilization to maintain realignment, and
- restoration of function.
- For bones to unite properly, the fractured ends must be brought into alignment, a process called reduction,
- commonly referred to as setting a fracture.
- In closed reduction, the fractured ends of a bone are brought into alignment by manual manipulation, and the skin remains intact.
- In open reduction, the fractured ends of a bone are brought into alignment by a surgical procedure in which internal fixation devices such as screws, plates, pins, rods, and wires are used.
- Following reduction, a fractured bone may be kept immobilized by a cast, sling, splint, elastic bandage, external fixation device, or a combination of these devices.
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