The simple answer here is no. An area of injury may bruise before, during, or after swelling. Depending on the location of the injury, the mechanism of injury, and the time of injury. If the injury is superficial in location, such as a blunt trauma to the skin overlying the thigh, it is common for bruising to occur in conjunction with the swelling. However, these two injury markers are not always present together. For instance, a knee injury will often cause inflammation and swelling of the joint, without any external evidence of bruising. Generally speaking, bruising is a superficial response to injury.
These symptoms occur right after the injury. Redness and swelling develop soon afterward.
If there is no injury then there is no reason to think anything out of the ordinary will occur
seek medical advice as there are a number of issue that occur to the knee which swelling indicates
An injury to the tissue that connects bone to bone is called a ligament injury. Ligaments are strong bands of tissue that help stabilize and support joints, and injuries to ligaments can occur through sudden twists, impacts, or overstretching of the joint. This type of injury can result in pain, swelling, instability, and limited range of motion in the affected joint.
It can occur anywhere in the brain. Where ever there is ischemic injury, necrosis and inflammation occur which cause death of neurons = "red neurons". It is usually seen within 12-48 hours after an ischemic event ie. thrombosis or embolism.
Swelling occurs in a tissue after an injury due to increased blood flow and leakage of fluids and white blood cells into the affected area. This response is part of the body's immune reaction to protect and heal the injured tissue.
An easy way to detect for hip bursitis is by swelling of the area as well as an increased stinging sensation in the afflicted injury. In addition, symptoms such as stiffness and immobility may occur.
post-traumatic stress disorder SDT
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
post-traumatic stress disorder SDT
It does that when it's infected