You know when you hear a full crack. Also, if you hear any onomatopoeia from the Rice Crispies slogan (Snap, Crackle, or Pop), then you know you've broken a bone.
Sometimes you won't hear a noise if it's a smaller, softer bone. Keep the wound raised and don't try to move it. If the pain doesn't go away in a matter of days even though you aren't messing with it, it's likely you've broken something.
The break of a mineral is called its cleavage. Cleavage refers to the way a mineral breaks along planes of weakness, resulting in smooth, flat surfaces.
the cleavage of gold is hackly. gold has niether fracture or cleaveage
Azurite does not have cleavage, but it exhibits a conchoidal fracture, meaning it breaks into smooth, curved surfaces similar to glass.
The mineral quartz show the property of fracture. it breaks along a curved surface. this kind of fracture is called conchoidal fracture. In math the quartz is x3.
The fracture of magnetite is typically subconchoidal to uneven, with irregular or jagged edges. It can also exhibit a brittle fracture pattern.
i don't know:)its a cord in you spine. To improve upon this it is actually a fracture in a vertibrae.
I don't know the specific definition but a remote fracture is one that is not fresh. As in an old fracture. There is probably a rule that it is >6 month or >1 year or something.
you prevent a fracture by putting it in a sling for 4 weeks and after, take it off slowly and you will know that God has healed you! P.S, hope it works!
Answer:It's been a while since EMT school, but I know it's called a 'closed fracture'. The type of fracture that breaks the skin is know as an 'open fracture'. They used to call it other names, but they've pretty much simplified it since.
actually, u can have a bone fracture, but i can also be many things,like a sprain or severe buising, or a twist, but to be sure you have to have a exray.
a fracture in which skin is intact at site of fracture is a closed fracture or simple fracture whereas compound fracture or an open fracture is a fracture in which the skin is perforated and there is an open wound down to the site of the fracture.
A broken bone is often called a "fracture" or "bone fracture". Some examples from the Wikipedia entry on bone fracture. * Complete Fracture- A fracture in which bone fragments separate completely. * Incomplete Fracture- A fracture in which the bone fragments are still partially joined. * Linear Fracture- A fracture that is parallel to the bone's long axis. * Transverse Fracture- A fracture that is at a right angle to the bone's long axis. * Oblique Fracture- A fracture that is diagonal to a bone's long axis. * Compression Fracture-A fracture that usually occurs in the vertebrae. * Spiral Fracture- A fracture where at least one part of the bone has been twisted. * Comminuted Fracture- A fracture causing many fragments. * Compacted Fracture- A fracture caused when bone fragments are driven into each other * Open Fracture- A fracture when the bone reaches the skin * Bug fracture- A fracture when the bone is in place, but the fracture has the appearance of a crushed insect.
Open....It's called an OPEN FRACTURE.
Open Fracture formerly known as a compound fracture.
When a fracture is associated with a laceration or cut in the area of the fracture, it is called an open fracture
A compound fracture, the worst kind.
An avulsion fracture is when you pull a ligament or tendon from a bone and a piece of that bone comes with it. It is not actually a "fracture". A fracture is a break.