Fracture Healing Flashcards

1
Q

Name some of the functions of bone.

A

Support
Protection Movement
Calcium and phosphate storage

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2
Q

What is cortical bone?

A

Compact or tubular bone
- 80% of the skeleton
Slow turnover rate/metabolic activity
Lines the outside of the bone

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3
Q

What is cancellous bone?

A
Spongy or trabecular bone
High turnover rate
High remodelling rate 
Elastic 
Found at the centre of bones (contains bone marrow)
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4
Q

Describe the composition of bone.

A
Matrix
- organic (collagen, mucopolysaccharides and non-collagenous proteins)
- inorganic (calcium and phosphate)
Cells
- osteoclasts
- osteoblasts
- osteocytes
- osteoprogenitor cells
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5
Q

How much of the matrix is organic, and what is it composed of?

A
40% organic components
Collagen (type 1)
Proteoglycans
Noncollagenous protiens
Growth factors
Cytokines
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6
Q

How much of the matrix is inorganic, and what is it composed of?

A

60% inorganic components
Calcium hydroxyapatite
Calcium phosphate

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7
Q

What are the names for the three different parts of a long bone?

A

Diaphysis - shaft
Epiphysis - end of the bone
Metaphysis - transitional flared region between the diaphysis and epiphysis

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8
Q

What is the physis of a bone?

A

Unique, cartilaginous feature of children’s bone
- responsible for skeletal growth
Allows remodelling of angular deformity after a fracture
If the physeal blood supply was damaged, it would cause growth arrest (partial or complete)
Is seen as a line of lucency at the metaphysis on an X-Ray

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9
Q

What are the two methods of fracture healing?

A

Indirect - secondary
- via callus formation
Direct - primary

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10
Q

What is the definition of indirect healing?

A

Formation of bone via a process of differential tissue formation until skeletal continuity is restored
Inflammation, repair and remodelling

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11
Q

What are the four stages of indirect fracture healing?

A

1) Fracture haematoma and inflammation
2) Soft callus formation
3) Hard callus formation
4) Bone remodelling

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12
Q

Describe the process of fracture haematoma and inflammation.

A

Blood from the broken vessels form a clot
- occurs 6-8 hours after injury
The dead bone cells cause swelling and inflammation to occur at the fracture site
- TNF-beta (regulatory protein in fracture healing)

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13
Q

Describe the process of soft callus formation.

A

Fibrocartilage (soft) callus lasts for about 3 weeks

  • new capillaries organise the fracture haematoma into granulation tissue (procallus)
  • fibroblasts and osteogenic cells invade the pro-callus
  • collagen fibres are made (connect the ends of the bone together)
  • chondrocytes begin to produce fibrocartilage
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14
Q

Describe the process of hard callus formation.

A

Bony (hard callus) lasts for around 3-4 months

- osteoblasts make woven bone, connecting the ends of the fracture together

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15
Q

Describe the process of bone remodelling after a fracture.

A

Osteoclasts remodel woven bone into compact bone and trabecular bone
- often no trace of fracture line on the X-Ray

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16
Q

What is direct fracture healing?

A

Artificial surgical situation
Holds the fracture stable directly (metal plates drilled into the bone)
- no movement at all is allowed
Relies on compression of the bone ends

17
Q

Define direct fracture healing/

A

Direct formation of bone, without the process of callus formation, to restore skeletal continuity

18
Q

How does direct fracture healing work?

A

The two ends of the fracture are pressed tightly together.
Bone is formed directly (without a callus) via osteoclastic absorption and osteoblastic formation
- osteblasts remove bone across the fracture site and osteoclasts trail behind and form bone across the fracture site
- ‘cutting cones’

19
Q

In both types of healing, what most the bone have in order to heal successfully?

A

A blood supply

20
Q

What are the names of the arteries that supply blood to the bone?

A

Inner 2/3rds
- endosteal
Outer 1/3rd
- periosteal

21
Q

What can compromise the blood supply?

A
Surgical factors (iatrogenic inhibition)
Anatomical fractures
22
Q

What anatomical factors can compromise the blood supply?

A

Proximal pole of scaphoid fractures
Talar neck fractures
Intracapsular hip fractures
Surgical neck of humerus fracture

23
Q

What are the risk factors that can inhibit fracture healing?

A
Increasing age
Diabetes
Anaemia
Malnutrition 
PVD
Hypothyroidism 
Smoking
Alcohol
24
Q

What medications often inhibit fracture healing?

A

NSAIDs
Steroids
Bisphosphonates

25
Q

How do NSAIDs inhibit fracture healing?

A

NSAIDs reduce local vascularity at the fracture site

May also affect healing independent of blood flow

26
Q

What action of NSAIDs seem to have the biggest effect on fracture healing?

A

COX-2 inhibition

27
Q

How do bisphosphonates inhibit fracture healing?

A

Inhibit osteoclastic activity
- remodelling can’t occur
- cutting cones cant occur in direct healing
These have a long half life, so patients may not heal properly for several months