unless you break a bone it is always a soft tissue injury.
Superficial fascia contains adipose (fat) tissue and connective tissue. It lies just beneath the skin and serves as padding and insulation for the body.
Foot fungus does not actually "eat" your foot. It is a fungal infection that grows on the skin and nails of the feet, usually in warm and moist environments. If left untreated, it can cause irritation, itching, and discomfort, but it does not physically consume or damage the foot tissue.
The area just beneath the skin layer is called the subcutaneous tissue, or subcutis. It is mainly composed of fat and connective tissue, providing insulation and cushioning for the body.
Connective tissue
Cardiac muscle tissue is specifically muscle tissue of the heart. It is smooth just like skeletal muscle tissue but has special characteristics that help it to contract at fast, steady rates.
It just has to be put back into place.
no it would make it worse
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.
It is VERY unlikely, this condition is just a floating/dislocated knee cap.
Because the liver is just on the outside of the tissue
Adipose tissue is just fat tissue. It's purpose is mainly to add protection to your body.
neurons are just the cells that make up the nervous tissue.
No it could be fractured or dislocated or you could have just badly bruised it or you could have sprained it it doesn't mean it is broken!
No....its just athletes foot
If you think that the hip is dislocated, then the dog needs to be at the vet. Would you want to be laying around with YOUR hip dislocated? If the leg is not bothering him with applied pressure, the chances are slim that it's dislocated. Unless it's a very slight dislocation or it's just not seated right. If my dog had been limping for a day, waiting another day would not be an option. Dogs limp because they are in pain - not for fun. My dog would be at an emergency vet getting pain meds and a diagnosis.
Nerve tissue and Epithelial tissue would be my guess. But I am no expert, just a homeschooling mom.
Muscle tissue is called just that. It is not as pliable as other tissue in the body and it is much more dense. Muscle tissue can be found in every area of the body.