Acute Injuries I
Types of Fractures
Chronic Injuries
Acute Injuries II
Healing
100

involves damage to a ligament that provides support to a joint

What is a sprain?

100

incomplete breaks in bones that have not completely ossified

What are greenstick fractures?

100

the most common overuse injury in sports, inflammation of a tendon

What is tendinitis?

100

extremely painful involuntary muscle contractions that occur most commonly in the calf, abdomen, or hamstrings

What are muscle cramps?

100

begins immediately following injury, phagocytic cells clean up the mess created by injury, injured cells release chemicals that facilitate the healing process. symptoms include: redness, pain, swelling, heat, and loss of function

What is the inflammatory response phase?

200

separation or tearing of the muscle fibers

What is a strain?

200

occur in straight lines, more or less at right angles to the bone shaft 

What are transverse fractures?

200

occurs around joints, where there is friction between the tendon and bone, skin and bone, or muscle and other muscles. inflammation of a bursa (piece of synovial membrane that contains a small amount of fluid and permit motion without friction)

What is bursitis?

200

involuntary muscle contractions that occur in response to pain following a musculoskeletal injury

What is muscle guarding?

200

proliferative and regenerative activity leads to scar formation and and repair of injured tissue

What is the fibroblastic repair phase?


300

occurs when at least one bone in a joint is forced completely out of its normal and proper alignment and must be manually or surgically put back into place 

What is a dislocation?

300

have an S-Shaped separation, common in football and skiing when the foot is planted and the body is suddenly rotated

What are spiral fractures?


300

area of tenderness in a tight band of muscle caused by acute muscle strain or static postural positions. often found in the neck, upper back, and lower back.

What are trigger points?

300

results from physical activity that one is not accustomed to, overexertion in strenuous exercise. can be acute-onset, or delayed-onset (DOMS)

What is muscle soreness?

300

long-term process, features realignment or remodeling of  the scar tissue according to the tensile forces to which the scar is subjected

What is the maturation-remodeling phase?

400

a bone comes partially out of its normal articulation and then goes right back into place

What is a subluxation?

400

occur when there is enough displacement of the fractured ends that the bone breaks through the surround tissue, including the skin

What are open fractures?


400

inflammation of a tendon and is synovial sheath, treated the same as tendinitis

What is tenosynovitis?

400

occurs when soft tissues are compressed between bone and some external force, aka bruise 

What is a contusion?

400

initiates the healing process

What is inflammation?

500

occur as a result of extreme stresses and strains placed on bones

What is a fracture?


500

results from overuse, repetitive forces transmitted through the bone irritate the periosteum, most common fracture that results from physical activity

What is a stress fracture?

500

degeneration of the articular or hyaline cartilage in a joint 

What is osteoarthritis?

500

chronic nerve irritation caused by repeated tension or compression 

What is neuritis?

500

for a fracture to heal, osteoblasts must lay down this structure over the fracture site

What is a callus?