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Splint the fracture in the position found.
No.
What is a nondisplaced fracture involving the greater tuberosity? nondisplaced fracture//the bone cracks with the broken peices still in alignment. Tuberosity//knoblike process. Process// prominant projection. There are many tuberosities on many of our bones. When you say greater, I assume it is in the femur, the "Greater Trochanter"? The femur has a gluteal tuberosity below the Greater Trochanter. Either way its a cracked bone where the tuberosity is or was.
Fracture repair is required when there is a need for restoration of the normal position and function of the broken bone. Throughout the stages of fracture healing, the bones must be held firmly in the correct position
closed fracture
It is amplitude
amplitude :)
The radius is one of two bones of the forearm. It's on the thumb side of your forearm. It's wide at the wrist end (distal) and narrow at the elbow end (proximal).The radial head is the name of the part of the radius at the elbow end of the forearm and forms part of the elbow joint.A non-displaced fracture just means that the fractured (broken) pieces of bone are not moved out of place. Another way of stating this is that the bone is cracked. It's broken all the way through but not moved out of its normal position.
reduction
To move or shift from the usual place or position, especially to force existing matter to a new position.
It's a point in the range of motion of a joint at which articulating surfaces are the least congruent and the supporting structures are the most lax .
Complicated