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Fracture acute
Fracture acute
Hematoma formation, cellular proliferation, callus formation, ossification, remodeling
An acute fracture occurs suddenly or happened fairly recently, from 3-6 weeks ago. A non-acute fracture, meanwhile, is long standing and may refer to a healed or an improperly healed fracture.
electrical or ultrasound stimulation
Hematoma formation (when blood rushes from the broken vessels to form a clot) is the first step of fracture healing.
Hematoma Formation
In the acute phase, while it is healing, the person most likely has a temporary disability. Whether the person has a permanent impairment depends on how well the fracture heals and whether there are any residual neurological impairments. The person's treating doctor would be in the best position to answer this.
An acute fracture is a break in a bone that occurs quickly, rapidly and usually traumatically. A non-acute fracture is one that occurs over time, often because of repeated physical stress or impact placed on the bone.
A bone fracture is never good. A callus on the bone fracture indicates healing has started.
electrical or ultrasound stimulation
electrical or ultrasound stimulation