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it depends upon how deep the wound is and area, skin conditions, and type of injury
The simple answer here is no. An area of injury may bruise before, during, or after swelling. Depending on the location of the injury, the mechanism of injury, and the time of injury. If the injury is superficial in location, such as a blunt trauma to the skin overlying the thigh, it is common for bruising to occur in conjunction with the swelling. However, these two injury markers are not always present together. For instance, a knee injury will often cause inflammation and swelling of the joint, without any external evidence of bruising. Generally speaking, bruising is a superficial response to injury.
No, climate is a description of the weather conditions present in an area over the average year. It considers temperature, precipitation, daylight and winds.
Your body is trying to compensate for your injury, protecting the healing bone by having other muscles lend a hand to the affected area. It's normal.
Weather is the area's day-to-day conditions and climate is the area's average conditions.
Weather is the area's day-to-day conditions and climate is the area's average conditions.
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the lungs and chest area is where most of the injury is done!!
I might want to find the surface area of a box if I were trying to wrap it as a birthday present, that way I'd know how much wrapping paper I would need.
The area of intellectual activity present in infants is the cognitive area.
This would be moisture buildup present in the air. The high pressure from this would develop over the area, getting conditions ready for the monsoon.
it depends with what the injury had caused to the vital area .