HOW FRACTURED BONE HEALED AND UNION
When the bone become fractured there are many mechanism or pathophysiology process which start after the bone become fractured to allow it to become healed as follow
When a bone break there is disruption of periosteum,
cortical bone trabecular bone and the blood vessels which run in the
periosteum and the medulla
There is haemorrhage and immediate release
of cytokines this signals to cells locally that damage has occurred
These cytokines attract macrophages, which start the clearing-up
process
They also attract undifferentiated stem cells, which migrate in
and start differentiating into fibroblast and bone -producing cells
These stem cells probably come from the periosteum and the endosteum,
and normally lie latent
The haematoma around the fracture is invaded with small
capillaries while the macrophages remove the haematoma itself
The haematoma around the fracture is invaded with small
capillaries while the macrophages remove the haematoma itself
At the same time
connective tissue is laid down the connective tissue slowly organises
This pattern of layers of organised tissue appear, first as a collar
arising from the periosteum close to the end of each broken bone
The
collars appear to grow towards the collar on the other bone Eventually,
the spurs of callus meet and bridge the fracture site
They become
increasingly thick, and strong fibrocartilage stabilises the fracture. this period, which in the adult occurs over the first few weeks after
the fracture, is described as the fracture becoming sticky
It may still
be possible to angulate the fracture but it is no longer possible to
translate the fracture (move it from side to side
Meanwhile in the
fracture cleft Itself, osteoclasts
continue to resorb haematoma and other dead tissue and to eat away the
broken bone ends
This can result in the fracture becoming more obvious
on radiographs over the first few weeks and, indeed, can make visible
fractures that were initially invisible (e.g. the scaphoid
The callus
of fibrous cartilage around the fracture cleft becomes calcified and
then ossified (so that it is visible on radiographs
Ossification
starts not at the bone ends but in the centre of the fracture cleft,
where oxygen levels may be very low
Cartilage may be laid down
initially rather than bone this cartilage is then replaced by bone (endochondral ossification). the callus is either derived from the haematoma or
from the periosteum by movement stimulates the
production of a callus.
When the fracture can no longer be angulated with normal
loads, and it is not painful to try, the fracture is said to be clinically united
When the fracture can no longer be angulated with normal
loads, and it is not painful to try, the fracture is said to be clinically united
On radiographs, when the Strands of ossified callus
can be seen to be stretching continuously from one bone end to another
the fracture is said to be radologically united , in neither case is the
fracture at full strength yet, but at this stage limited activity can
be undertaken safe
Finally, the callus forms a fat cuff of woven bone
from one bone end to the other
This callus is at least as strong as the
bone around it, because it has widened the diameter of the tube and
this confers extra strength
This stage is called consolidation Over the
next months the woven bone is replaced by Haversian cortical bone which
remodels over the following years, until it is almost impossible
to see
where the fracture was in the bone
HOW YOU CAN DETERMINING UNION OF BONE FRACTURES
Types of bone union
• Clinically:united pain free to pressure not full strength
• Radiologically :united bone cross the fracture cleft
• Consolidatiaon :osteoblastic activity has returned to near normal or full strength
Clinical union
A bone is clinically united when putting load on the fracture produces no detectable movement and no pain
The fracture site
will not yet be as strong as the bone around it, but it is
united
Radiological union
This is not the same as clinical union
It occurs when the callus
around the fracture can be seen to pass from one broken bone end to
the other without a gap between
The fracture across the
medulla of the bone may still be visible, but the callus around the
bone is continuous
The bone should now be able to cope with
normal loads but will not be as strong as the bone around it
From a
management point of view, it is the time when movement and
loading of the limb should be increased to build up muscle power,
mobility and proprioception
If the patient plays sport or works in
a job involving heavy labour he or she should not return to this
unless the bone is protected or until the fracture has consolidated
Consolidation
Consolidation takes much longer than union
Consolidation
Consolidation takes much longer than union
And is defined as the time when
the process of fracture healing is complete and the strength of
the bone has risen to normal levels or even beyond
The formation
of callus around a fracture creates a strong cuff The diameter
of this cuff is greater than the diameter of the bone itself, and
so a consolidated fracture can be stronger than
the original bone
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