Biology, asked by Atah, 3 months ago

What is fracture? Explain different types of fracture​

Answers

Answered by kyash0055
4

Answer:

In a complete fracture, your bone breaks completely. It's snapped or crushed into two or more pieces. Types of complete fracture include: single fracture, in which your bone is broken in one place into two pieces. comminuted fracture, in which your bone is broken or crushed into three or more pieces.

Answered by bagtanarmy123
17

Explanation:

What is a fracture?

A fracture is a broken bone. It can range from a thin crack to a complete break. Bone can fracture crosswise, lengthwise, in several places, or into many pieces. Most fractures happen when a bone is impacted by more force or pressure than it can support.

Explain different types of fracture?

.

Closed vs. open

A closed fracture is also called a simple fracture. In a closed fracture, the broken bone doesn’t break your skin.

An open fracture is also called a compound fracture. In an open fracture, the ends of the broken bone tear your skin. When your bone and other internal tissues are exposed, it puts you at higher risk of infection.

Incomplete vs. complete

In an incomplete fracture, your bone doesn’t break completely. In other words, it cracks without breaking all the way through. Types of incomplete fracture include:

hairline fracture, in which your bone is broken in a thin crack

greenstick fracture, in which your bone is broken on one side, while the other side is bent

buckle or torus fracture, in which your bone is broken on one side and a bump or raised buckle develops on the other side

In a complete fracture, your bone breaks completely. It’s snapped or crushed into two or more pieces. Types of complete fracture include:

single fracture, in which your bone is broken in one place into two pieces

comminuted fracture, in which your bone is broken or crushed into three or more pieces

compression fracture, in which your bone collapses under pressure

nondisplaced fracture, in which your bone breaks into pieces that stay in their normal alignment

displaced fracture, in which your bone breaks into pieces that move out of their normal alignment

segmental fracture, in which your bone is broken in two places in a way that leaves at least one segment floating and unattached

Incomplete fractures are more common in children. Their bones are softer than those of adults. As a result, they’re more likely to bend than break. Complete fractures can happen at any age.

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