2 Arms- (IMO)
Breaking your leg is definitely worse. A lot worse.
Two arms and two legs.
Depending how fall the fall is, and how tall you are... many things can happen. Ive seen people with spiral fractures from there heels to there fingertips, concussion, ruptured spleens, broken ribs, of course the obvious broken arms, leg's. remember there are two sets of bones in your arms and leg's. arms humorous and radius and legs tibial/fibular. If you really fell more then 10 ft, that is considered to be a significant trauma, and you should be seen by a trauma center!!
its a broken leg. The tibia is one of the two long bones between the knee and ankle.
A number of years ago my iguana had two broken arms. I bought her to the vet and he basically splinted them with what I remember looked like popsicle sticks. If you think the leg might be broken best to have a vet take a look
Broken ribs and two bones broken in his arms. i think that's it
The most severe leg injury is a broken bone. This is a situation whereby the bone is split into two parts, exposing the tibia. There is no remedy for this kind of leg injury, except amputation.
Both your lower legs and lower arms are made of two bones each. The radius is the larger bone of the arm, analagous to the larger tibia of the leg. The ulna is the smaller bone of the arm, while the fibula is the smaller bone of the leg.
Yes, by the person falling down and/or thrashing around during the seizure, broken bones are certainly possible.
The most severe leg injury is a broken bone. This is a situation whereby the bone is split into two parts, exposing the tibia. There is no remedy for this kind of leg injury, except amputation.
Turn up. Pass the drugs test and background check you are in if you have two legs and two arms. On a slow week one leg will do.
The tibia is one of two bones that make up your lower leg (the part of your leg that starts at the knee and ends at the ankle). The other bone is called the Fibula. A tibia xray is a way of looking at the density of those two bones in your lower leg, often with the intention of identifying a fracture, or broken bone.