your knee cap
If you bang you knee right below the knee cap (patella), you will hit your shin bone (tibia). If you hit right on the knee it will be your patella.
This depends on how you fall. If you scratch or cut your knee, you will most likely bleed. If you bang your knee, then you will most likely get a bruise. If you bend or twist your knee in an unnatural way, then you could break, sprain, fracture, of rupture the ligaments or bone that makes up your knee.
lateral collateral ligament (LCL) is most likely injured when the knee is hit from the lateral side. The LCL connects the femur (thigh bone) to the fibula (smaller bone in the lower leg) and provides stability to the outer side of the knee.
The tibia is a large shin bone (as oppossed to the fibula which is it's smaller partner) which starts from the knee and ends at the ankle. A chip most likely means that your bone has been damaged and a small particle has broken off.
The largest sesamoid bone in the body is the patella, most commonly known as the kneecap.
sprained angle, knee, pulled hamstring, bleeding Most likely is that soccer players will get knee problems... i have a knee problem from soccer since i was nine.
medial collateral
The Zygomatic Arch
The most likely treatment is a bone marrow transplant.
Giant cell tumors generally develop in a section of the thigh bone near the knee
The patella (/pəˈtɛlə/), also known as the kneecap or kneepan, is a thick, circular-triangular bone which articulates with the femur (thigh bone) and covers and protects the anterior articular surface of the knee joint. The patella is found in many tetrapods, such as mice, cats, and birds, but not in whales or most reptiles and amphibianssuch as snakes or frogs.
Clavicle (collarbone).