Fractures


 

  • Definition: Fractures are broken bones involving bones, muscles, tendons, ligaments, and soft tissues.

  • Symptoms: Include pain (continuous), numbness, muscle spasms, deformities, limb shortening, crepitus (grating sound), edema, and ecchymosis (bruising).

  • Types:

    • Closed (simple): No break in skin; requires monitoring for edema, pain, and manual alignment.

    • Open (compound): Skin broken; risks include infection, bleeding, and tetanus. May require surgical fixation.

      • Type I: Clean wound <1 cm.

      • Type II: Minimal soft tissue damage.

      • Type III: Highly contaminated wound with soft tissue damage or vascular injury.

  • Complications:

    • Acute (24–72 hrs):

      • Shock (especially pelvic or long bone fractures).

      • Fat embolism — bone marrow fat enters bloodstream causing respiratory and cardiac symptoms.

      • Compartment syndrome — pressure builds in muscle compartments, reducing circulation and causing emergency; may need fasciotomy.

    • Delayed: Malunion — bone heals in incorrect position.

  • Nursing Interventions:

    • Splint and immobilize the limb, manage pain, monitor for infection, cover open wounds with sterile saline gauze, and perform frequent neuro checks (6 P’s: pain, pulse, pallor, paresthesia, paralysis, pressure).

  • Traction: Uses pulling force to maintain bone alignment (skin or skeletal). Never remove weights; keep skin integrity intact.

  • Key Note: Immobility increases the risk of DVT (deep vein thrombosis), so limb elevation and circulation checks are crucial.

  • Definition: Fractures are broken bones involving bones, muscles, tendons, ligaments, and soft tissues.

  • Symptoms: Include pain (continuous), numbness, muscle spasms, deformities, limb shortening, crepitus (grating sound), edema, and ecchymosis (bruising).

  • Types:

    • Closed (simple): No break in skin; requires monitoring for edema, pain, and manual alignment.

    • Open (compound): Skin broken; risks include infection, bleeding, and tetanus. May require surgical fixation.

      • Type I: Clean wound <1 cm.

      • Type II: Minimal soft tissue damage.

      • Type III: Highly contaminated wound with soft tissue damage or vascular injury.

  • Complications:

    • Acute (24–72 hrs):

      • Shock (especially pelvic or long bone fractures).

      • Fat embolism — bone marrow fat enters bloodstream causing respiratory and cardiac symptoms.

      • Compartment syndrome — pressure builds in muscle compartments, reducing circulation and causing emergency; may need fasciotomy.

    • Delayed: Malunion — bone heals in incorrect position.

  • Nursing Interventions:

    • Splint and immobilize the limb, manage pain, monitor for infection, cover open wounds with sterile saline gauze, and perform frequent neuro checks (6 P’s: pain, pulse, pallor, paresthesia, paralysis, pressure).

  • Traction: Uses pulling force to maintain bone alignment (skin or skeletal). Never remove weights; keep skin integrity intact.

  • Key Note: Immobility increases the risk of DVT (deep vein thrombosis), so limb elevation and circulation checks are crucial.

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