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What type of tissue damage might you expect to find in a dislocated joint?

There are different types of tissue damages that might you expect to find in a dislocated joint. The most common include the muscle fiber tissue and the supporting connective tissue.


What type of tissue damage might you expect to fine in dislocated joint?

dislocated tissue


What happens to the muscle tissue when exercising?

muscle contraction


What happens to the muscle tissue in response to resistance training?

the muscle tissue breaks and then grows back stronger and thicker


What happens to the organ if muscle tissue are injured?

a person can have a lot of pain or even maybe a disability if a particular muscle tissue is injured...


Will a dislocated shoulder ever be normal again?

A dislocated shoulder usually heals with no aftereffects. Pathological conditions in the surrounding bone and connective tissue structures may impede this. Note however that bones and connective tissue don't get the blood flow muscles to, so when they're bruised, for instance, it can take a while to return to normal. Hang in there -- odds are excellent it'll get better.


What happens in your muscle tissue and cells when the demand of oxygen is not met?

If the demand for oxygen is not met for a long period of time, the cells within the muscle tissue will die.


What happens to muscle tissue after death?

well you dont have it anymor learned it from science


What are the Components of muscle tissue in a meat?

skeletal muscle tissue,cardiac muscle tissue smooth muscle tissue


What muscle covers the majority of the shoulder joint?

none as the joint ca[sule is an inert structure meaning no contractile tissue


Is the muscle tissue superficial to the epidermal tissue?

Muscle tissue is deep to epidermal tissue. Epidermal tissue is superficial to muscle tissue.


How do you know if your shoulder is dislocated or if you just popped blood vessels that are in your shoulder to cause a great pain when you move and feels like you are sore?

When you dislocate a shoulder, the rounded head (or condyle) of the Humerus (upper arm bone) pops out of the socket -- it's a ball-and-socket type of joint. With a dislocation, you should be able to feel (palpate) the condyle in your armpit or elsewhere nearby. Also, if your shoulder is dislocated you will be in extreme pain and mostly unable to move the arm. That said, even if you've not dislocated the shoulder, you've clearly done a lot of damage. Even with a soft tissue injury at that location, I would certainly get it x-rayed, just to be sure. And I'd also talk about pain control, and possibly some rehab.