Tendons themselves do not have a direct blood supply. However, they are surrounded by blood vessels that can bleed if there is an injury to the surrounding tissues, such as a tendon tear or rupture. In those cases, bleeding can occur around the tendon, but not within the tendon itself.
A tendon basically feels like a tough band like a rubber band but stronger. When the tendon is torn inside the body, the area will feel hot and most likely swollen.
Tendons attach muscle to bone.
tendons connect muscles to bones.
Tendons and muscles. It's the tendons that attach the bone to the muscle.
An orthopedic surgeon
because tendons is what make the wing move
Tendons themselves do not have a direct blood supply. However, they are surrounded by blood vessels that can bleed if there is an injury to the surrounding tissues, such as a tendon tear or rupture. In those cases, bleeding can occur around the tendon, but not within the tendon itself.
Usually the hymen once broken, will make the girl bleed only once.
I don't know does someone else know
tendons connect muscles to bones, cartilage cushions joints
does torn ligament and tendons cause fibula not to heal
tendons are not bones therefore they cannot break its probably a torn tendon
Yes, it may.
A sprain is an injury in which a muscle is overstretched or torn. Tendinitis is an injury that occurs when a tendon becomes inflamed or torn. That's the difference between a muscle sprain and tendinitis.
Tendons attach muscles to bones. Tendons may also attach muscles to structures such as the eyeball. Tendons are connective tissues that are tough fibrous material rich in collagen. The muscles and tendons help to control joint movement. Muscles have tendinous origins (where they arise) and insertions (where they insert) on bones. Tendons are the part of the muscle that is white and fibrous. Tendons have very little blood supply so when torn it takes some time to heal. In severe tendon injuries the attachment of the tendon can be torn away from the bone. The same tissue that connects bone to bone is called a ligament. The difference is an anatomical one, not a functional one.
The hymen can bleed if it is torn, but how much depends on the individual and how badly it is torn - sometimes it will not tear at all. Often people bleed during sex and they falsely believe the hymen is to blame, but more often than not heavy bleeding during sex is a result of vaginal tearing.