why bones pops out??????
Answers
Answered by
1
The joints in our bodies can make a weird and wonderful array of perplexing sounds.
Perhaps you like to crack your knuckles. Or your knees creak when you go up stairs. Or you might have a strange popping sound in your ankles when you run.
But do we need to see someone about those snaps, clicks or crunches? Or are your noisy joints best ignored?
Usually, if there are no other symptoms, you don't need to lose sleep over noisy joints, says Dr Michael Vagg, clinical senior lecturer in medicine at Victoria's Deakin University and a pain specialist with Victoria's Barwon Health.
But there are so many different sorts of sounds, it's hard to give a blanket answer.
Harmless pops
The most common noises are what Dr Vagg calls "benign pops or high-pitched snaps".
These are thought to occur when the fluid-filled sac within joints gets stretched by a sudden change in position. The resulting pressure and volume change causes gases dissolved in the fluid to form bubbles.
But whether it's the creation of the bubbles or their collapse that forms the popping sound has been hotly debated.
If you're someone who loves to crack knuckles, you can take heart that evidence from long-term knuckle crackers suggests it's harmless (apart from the annoyance to those who don't like listening to it).
But you don't have to deliberately crack your knuckles to create these sounds
Hope it helps you friend request to please mark brainliest if you liked my post
Alplali
Ace
Perhaps you like to crack your knuckles. Or your knees creak when you go up stairs. Or you might have a strange popping sound in your ankles when you run.
But do we need to see someone about those snaps, clicks or crunches? Or are your noisy joints best ignored?
Usually, if there are no other symptoms, you don't need to lose sleep over noisy joints, says Dr Michael Vagg, clinical senior lecturer in medicine at Victoria's Deakin University and a pain specialist with Victoria's Barwon Health.
But there are so many different sorts of sounds, it's hard to give a blanket answer.
Harmless pops
The most common noises are what Dr Vagg calls "benign pops or high-pitched snaps".
These are thought to occur when the fluid-filled sac within joints gets stretched by a sudden change in position. The resulting pressure and volume change causes gases dissolved in the fluid to form bubbles.
But whether it's the creation of the bubbles or their collapse that forms the popping sound has been hotly debated.
If you're someone who loves to crack knuckles, you can take heart that evidence from long-term knuckle crackers suggests it's harmless (apart from the annoyance to those who don't like listening to it).
But you don't have to deliberately crack your knuckles to create these sounds
Hope it helps you friend request to please mark brainliest if you liked my post
Alplali
Ace
Answered by
1
The fluid contains the gases oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide. When you pop or crack a joint, you stretch the joint capsule. Gas is rapidly released, which forms bubbles. In order to crack the same knuckle again, you have to wait until the gases return to the synovial fluid.
Similar questions