If you're talking about the the process of creating extra tissue, write "callus formation." If you're describing the tissue itself, you might write "callous formation," but typically you would just use the word "callus." "Callous" is also an adjective that means something akin to cruel.
The homophone for callous is callus
Callous is the homophone for callus.
The correct spelling is "callous." Callous is used to describe someone who is emotionally hardened or insensitive.
When a callous or corn is healing, it will become smaller. There is no particular coloration or appearance to the callous or corn other than the shrinking effect of the healing.
The word callus means acclimate, adapt, adjust, blunt, brutalize, callous, coarsen, conform, habituate, indurate, steel, and stiffen. Some antonyms for the word callus include enliven, disorder, disarranged, neglected, unfit, weaken, and indulge.
The abstract noun form for the adjective callous is callousness.The abstract noun form for the verb to callous is the gerund, callousing.
The order of stages of bone fracture healing is formation of a hematoma, formation of a fibrocartilaginous callus, formation of a bony callus, and, finally, bone remodeling.
Callus formation occurs during the proliferation phase of wound healing, which typically happens around 5-7 days after the injury.
-adjective1.made hard; hardened.2.insensitive; indifferent; unsympathetic: They have a callous attitude toward the sufferings of others.3.having a callus; indurated, as parts of the skin exposed to friction.-verb (used with object), verb (used without object)4.to make or become hard or callous.
Stratus corneum
There are four stages in the repair of a broken bone: 1) the formation of hematoma at the break, 2) the formation of a fibrocartilaginous callus, 3) the formation of a bony callus, and 4) remodeling and addition of compact bone.
Reparitive phase - 2nd phase of bone healing