yes up to certain age It's easy to think of our bones as solid, lifeless matter where all of our living tissue just sits. But your skeleton is as much a living part of your being as your softer tissues and organs. The body stores minerals in the hard, compact bone. It produces red blood cells in the inner red marrow and stores fat in the yellow marrow. It's important to remember that your bones are constantly changing. Cells called osteoclasts constantly break down old bone so that osteoblasts can replace it with new bone tissue -- a process called bone remodeling. Another type of cell called a chondroblast forms new cartilage. These are three of the primary cells responsible for bone growth -- and not just the bone growth you experience early in life. This constant bone remodeling gradually replaces old bone tissue with new tissue during the course of months. = Bone growth = The bones of embryos are made largely of cartilage. They are soft. The process of ossification uses calcium to create bone as the child grows and matures. Bones gradually become hard and strong. With age bones lose their density and strength. When severe this is called osteoporosis. Eating foods containing calcium and exercising regularly helps bones to develop and stay stronger for longer.
Bone cells repair themselves by regenerating by a reproduction process called meiosis, or asexual cellular division, which connect the gap or abnormal space present between two bones, hence repairing themselves.
A hematoma forms soon after the bone fracture within a few hours. In the next couples of hours to a few days, new vessels form and the periosteum gives rise to fibrocartilaginous callus. Within the next month, endochondral ossification occurs where new bone callus from he periosteum replaces the fibrocartilaginous callus. The bone is then remodeled where the exernal and internal excess bony material is removed. The bone remodeling process can take longer than a year.
blood around break hardens, then minerals in the bone seep out, then a callus starts to form, after the callus hardens, the bone is healed
they disappear in you sleep and when you wake up you have new bones
The broken bone that heal are your fingers, legs, ankle,arms,foot , and your elbo. These are the only bones in your body that are able to heal.
calcium reconstruction and deposits
5 years to repar
yes it does
tendonitis
first aid of bone injuries
overuse injury
Mesenchymal Stem Cells respond to injury by diving to assist in connective tissue repair.
Bone remodeling to convert woven bone to compact bone
Periostium can be a place where tendons and ligaments attach to the bone. It also aids in growth and repair from injury.
tendonitis
Like any other part of the body that gets hurt or damaged, the blood runs to the injury, and heals it up. The bone marrow and bone start to regenerate until it it fully healed.
A skeletal bone injury.
bone
Bone is constantly remodeled during much of life by osteoblasts and osteoclasts. As such, the repair to a broken bone heals faster because it models the bone back in place, and sometimes it will heal stronger than it was before the injury.
injury repair.
first aid of bone injuries
The general care for the muscles bone or joint injury include massage and regular exercise.
yes!
Bone edema is what doctors call swelling within bone. Bone swelling is typically identified by MRI and is the result of either a direct injury to bone or stress injuries. Bone edema can also be found due to an inflammatory injury of bone caused by various forms of infection or arthritis.
The most severe leg injury is a broken bone. This is a situation whereby the bone is split into two parts, exposing the tibia. There is no remedy for this kind of leg injury, except amputation.