An angulated fracture is one in which the bones, once broken, no longer line up in the straight line they used to assume, and have broken into an angle. The fifth toe is the little toe.
An angulated fracture may or may not be displaced. It refers to a fracture where the bone is bent at an angle, which can occur with or without a significant shift in the bone's alignment. Displacement specifically describes a fracture where the ends of the broken bone are not aligned, so an angulated fracture could be classified as displaced if the bone fragments are misaligned.
Usually the medical term for the fifth toe is fifth toe. You could also call it the fifth digit of the foot, or the fifth pedal digit. The layman's term for the fifth toe is the pinky toe.
Little Toe or Fifth Toe
A common fracture of the fifth metacarpal bone of the hand is often referred to as the "Boxer's Fracture." The fifth metacarpal is the bone in the hand that attaches to the pinky finger.
First toe (Big toe) Second toe (Index toe) Third toe (Middle toe) Fourth toe (Fore toe) Fifth toe (Baby toe)
big toe splint
A severely angulated laterally and anteriorly fracture that is slightly impacted means that the bones in the area of the fracture do not line up. The bones are actually lying at an angle to each other.
Hallux (big toe) Second toes (long toe) Third toe (middle toe) Fourth toe (ring toe) Fifth Toe (pinky toe, baby toe, or little toe)
probably not but you should talk to your doctor
A non-displaced fracture of the pinky toe refers to a break in the bone of the toe where the bone cracks but does not move out of its normal position. In other words, the bone remains aligned and in its proper place, even though it has fractured. Read More..... shorturl. at/iZl3Y
"severely angulated laterally and anteriorly and slightly impacted mean
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