Fractures and Fracture Repair
Three types of bone cells are involved in bone tissue generation: osteoblasts, osteocytes, and osteoclasts. Osteoblasts produce and secrete collagen fibers and other organic components to form the osteoid that mineralizes into bone tissue. Osteocytes become embedded within the mineralized matrix and maintain bone structure. Lastly, osteoclasts break down and resorb bone tissue in the process of bone remodeling (Marieb & Hoehn, 2019).
Fracture repair occurs in several overlapping steps: inflammatory response and hematoma formation, fibrocartilaginous callus formation, bony callus formation, and bone remodeling. Inflammatory cells arrive to remove debris and form a hematoma. Next, a fibrocartilaginous callus forms a bridge between bone ends. Osteoblasts then facilitate bony callus formation to stabilize the fracture. Finally, osteoblasts and osteoclasts remodel the bone to restore shape and structure (Shier et al., 2019).
Fortunately, Kyndall’s tibia fracture occurred safely below the proximal growth plate region. Epiphyseal plates (physis) are essential for regulating bone lengthening, located between each long bone’s epiphysis and diaphysis growth centers. Since Kyndall’s injury spared the growth plate cartilage, early realignment, and fracture immobilization should allow normal developmental bone growth to continue once healed. However, any damage directly to the epiphyseal cartilage matrix could trigger growth arrest, given its precarious regulation of bone elongation. This growth disruption could lead to stunted overall limb development, noticeable limb length discrepancies over time, or angular limb deformities if misaligned – highlighting the importance of prompt pediatric fracture reduction (Marieb & Hoehn, 2019).
Based on the described “huge knot” and swelling at Kyndall’s tibia fracture location, she likely suffered a transverse closed fracture from acute traumatic impact against the bone cortex. The integrity of the overlying skin tissue remained intact despite the forceful injury mechanism, distinguishing this simple two-fragment fracture as closed rather than an open/compound fracture. The transverse orientation indicates the fracture line runs horizontally perpendicular to the long axis of the tibia bone. Prompt orthopedic management with manipulation and immobilization, as noted by Betts et al. (2013), aims to properly realign bony segments for optimal healing potential and prevent complications in such a young, developmentally vulnerable pediatric patient.
References
Betts, J. G., Desaix, P., Johnson, E., Johnson, J. E., Korol, O., Kruse, D., Poe, B., Wise, J. A., Womble, M., & Young, K. A. (2013). Anatomy & physiology. OpenStax. https://openstax.org/books/anatomy-and-physiology/pages/1-introduction
Marieb, E. N., & Hoehn, K. (2019). Human anatomy & physiology (11th ed.). Pearson.
Shier, D., Butler, J., & Lewis, R. (2019). Hole’s human anatomy & physiology (15th ed.). McGraw-Hill Education.
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Question
Kynndal had just turned two years old. She was a Daddy’s girl who loved to help her Dad wash his motorcycle. She could often be found running around the house making motorcycle noises and would ask her Dad to take her for a ride on his motorcycle. Dad would hold her and let her sit on his bike but he wasn’t ready to take her for a ride yet. She was too small and he feared she would fall off.
Since she couldn’t ride with Dad, for her birthday, Dad got her a battery-propelled Lil’ Rider three-wheeled sports bike. She was excited to ride her little bike and be like Daddy. On her first ride down the sidewalk, her neighbor’s dog (a big mastiff), ran over to Kyndall to greet her but accidentally knocked her off of the bike. Kyndall started crying and grabbing her leg. Seeing that the left leg had a huge knot, she was rushed to the neighborhood clinic where she was diagnosed with a fracture of the tibia. A pretty pink cast was placed on her leg and she was allowed to go home. A follow-up visit to an orthopedic surgeon revealed that no surgery was necessary. Whew!
Deliverables
Answer the following questions and save your responses in a Microsoft Word document. Provide a scholarly resource in APA format to support your answers.
Describe the bone cells that are involved in the generation of bone tissue.
Describe the steps of fracture repair.
The physician indicated that Kyndall was lucky because the fracture occurred about 3 inches below the epiphyseal plate. Why is this important? What are some possible outcomes if the epiphyseal plate had been damaged?
What type of fracture do you think occurred and why?