fractures Guide

Femur Stress Fractures Section


 

Femur Stress Fractures Navigation

First Aid Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Types Of Fractures |
Femur Fractions |
Compression Fractures |
Skull Fractures |
Wrist Fractures |
Skull Fractures |
Skull Fractures |
Wrist Fractures |
Compression Fractures |
Ankle Fractures |
Skull Fractures |
Compound Fractures |
Hip Fractures |
Stress Fractures |
Skull Fractures |

List of fractures Articles

Everything First Aid Best seller

DOWNLOAD IT NOW,$10.00!



Best Femur Stress Fractures products

Sitemap

Quote of the Day: Fannie Farmer

"I certainly feel that the time is not far distant when a knowledge of the principles of diet will be an essential part of one's education. Then mankind will eat to live, be able to do better mental and physical work and disease will be less frequent."



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on fractures
First Name:
Email address:


Main Femur Stress Fractures sponsors


 



Welcome to fractures Guide

 

Femur Stress Fractures Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Rib Fractures-The Most Common Fractures

from:

Almost every part of our body can suffer a fracture at one time or another. The most common fractures or injuries the body may suffer from trauma to the chest are rib fractures. In fact, over 50% of all thoracic injuries from nonpenetrating trauma result in rib fractures. Rib fractures, by themselves, are not usually life threatening, but they can be an underlying indication of a chest or abdominal problem. Rib fractures can occur in a number of ways. The elderly most often get rib fractures from falls, either while standing on at great heights. Automobile accidents are the highest cause for rib fractures in adults, while young adults and children suffer rib fractures most often from athletic and recreational activities. Occasionally, patients have suffered rib fractures from excessive coughing while they were sick.

The human body has a chest wall that protects the human organs by providing a covering, which are the sternum, clavicles and ribs. Our chest needs to be intact and in good condition for normal respiration. In other words, if we have problems in or under our chest wall, we may have difficulty breathing. Rib fractures can cause problems with our respiratory functions or interfere with our muscles working correctly. The result can be insufficient ventilation. If rib fractures are serious and have fragments in the chest wall, it can lead to hemothorax (blood in the lungs or chest cavity) or pneumothorax (pneumonia in the chest).

Some of our ribs are more susceptible to fractures than others are, with the first rib seldom being fractured because of the protection it gets from the clavicle or collarbone. If it does become fractures, there can be serious complications to our nervous system and spinal column. The most commonly fractured ribs are ribs 4 through 9, which are the middle ribs. Rib fractures to these ribs usually occur from an injuries that crush the chest or from indirect blows or physical trauma. These ribs are located in the weakest spot in the chest. The lower ribs can also become fractured, which can cause injury to the diaphragm. Regardless of what kind of rib fractures we suffer, they all can be quite painful because they affect and make our breathing more difficult. If many ribs become fractured, the result can be a flailed chest, which is when the chest is caved in. This condition can be quite serious and life threatening.

Some of the symptoms of rib fractures are difficulty breathing without pain, a part of the chest wall moving independently from the rest and a raspy sound when breathing. The most common treatment for rib fractures are rest, light physical therapy and, possibly, wrapping the chest wall. Over the counter pain medications are usually recommended.





Other Femur Stress Fractures related Articles

Types Of Bone Fractures
Dating Of Corner Fractures
Pelvic Fractures
Ankle Fractures
Clavicle Fractures





























See how you can make money from the Internet using web sites like these. The trainning, you receive for this program, is awesome.Click on Niches in a Box.



SHOP THE MINI MALL


 

Femur Stress Fractures News

2008 Year in Review For Tiger Woods, a Singular Triumph on One ... - New York Times


Telegraph.co.uk

2008 Year in Review For Tiger Woods, a Singular Triumph on One ...
New York Times, United States - Dec 28, 2008
Playing with two stress fractures in his tibia, on a knee so unstable that the femur, tibia and fibula were rubbing against one another, with pain etched on ...
Top 10: padraig edged tiger Golf365.co.za
all 107 news articles

Read more...


Ski Report Avoiding the Dreaded Knee ‘Pop’ - New York Times


New York Times

Ski Report Avoiding the Dreaded Knee ‘Pop’
New York Times, United States - Dec 25, 2008
The centrally located anterior cruciate ligament, which connects the femur and tibia bones and helps stabilize the knee, can’t handle the stress. ...

Read more...


SAUNDERS: Triumphant Woods best '08 image - Rocky Mountain News


SAUNDERS: Triumphant Woods best '08 image
Rocky Mountain News, CO - Dec 28, 2008
We later learned Woods played with two stress fractures in his tibia on a knee so unstable that the femur, tibia and fibula were rubbing against one another ...

Read more...


Osteoid Osteoma: Diagnosis and Treatment - Ortho SuperSite


Osteoid Osteoma: Diagnosis and Treatment
Ortho SuperSite, NJ - Dec 11, 2008
5,11 Other differentials include osteoblastomas, stress fractures, arthritis, etc. In intra-articular lesions, osteophytes, muscle atrophy, local osteopenia ...

Read more...