Friday, May 25, 2012
How Fracture Can Easily Happen
One day I was playing cricket on the roof of my house. The side’s wall of the roof was so small. Suddenly the player hit the ball and the wall was in the air. I was the fielder during the game. After that I was running to catch the ball with my eyes focused on it on the sky. Suddenly my leg slipped and I fell down to the ground from the first floor. With the sound of my falling, the family members who were busy in their works came out of the house. They were shocked because I was already down on the ground and weeping so loudly. My brother took me and ran for the doctor. By God’s blessings, the clinic was nearby. When doctor saw my position, he talked with my mother. The bones of both the leg were broken. For the confirmation, he wrote a letter for the X-ray of both legs.
When the X-ray report came, the doctor analyzes it and he fully confirmed that I had a broken bone on my legs. He started the treatment and told me that I have to take a bed rest for a minimum of two months. In the first month, there is no need to do any kind of work. Doctor covers both legs with the plaster and prescribed approximately 7-8 tablets a day. The injury was so critical for me.
Fractures occur because the bone tissue is exposed to forces that overwhelm its capacity for structural adaptation. Examples include fracture of the thighbone and fractured bones of the foot (march fracture) in soldiers during their initial months of physical training. Stress injury usually produced pain even before bone abnormality can be seen by X-ray. Fractured bones that occur because of preexisting disease are called pathologic fractures. Bone diseases associated with it are osteomalacia, Paget disease, and radiation injury to bone.
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