Fracture acute
Fracture acute
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.
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.
in the first and second metatarsal.
A subacute fracture is one that is neither exactly acute or chronic. A subacute fracture is one that is not expected to heal very quickly but neither is expected to take an extended time to heal.
intense acute pain in the affected region and lack of mobility in that part
A break in a bone from a quick, one-time injury. (apex)
A break in a bone from a quick, one-time injury. (apex)
A break in a bone from a quick, one-time injury. (apex)
A break in a bone from a quick, one-time injury
An oblique distal fibula fracture is a break in the smaller bone of the lower leg. The break is located closer to the ankle than to the knee, and the break has a diagonal orientation. The use of both "acute" and "subacute" doesn't make sense.