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  2. Hip fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip_fracture

    The most common cause for hip fractures in the elderly is osteoporosis; if this is the case, treatment of the osteoporosis can well reduce the risk of further fracture. Only young patients tend to consider having it removed; the implant may function as a stress riser , increasing the risk of a break if another accident occurs.

  3. Stress fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress_fracture

    Previous stress fractures have been identified as a risk factor. [7] Along with history of stress fractures, a narrow tibial shaft, high degree of hip external rotation, osteopenia, osteoporosis, and pes cavus are common predisposing factors for stress fractures. [4] Common causes in sport that result in stress fractures include: [6] Over training

  4. Hip Pain: The Most Common Causes & How to Prevent It - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/hip-pain-most-common...

    A hip fracture is when you break the ball of your hip or your femur (where the thigh bone meets the hip). It usually causes severe, sudden pain after a fall or car accident. Tendonitis

  5. Osteoporosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteoporosis

    The incidence of hip fractures increases each decade from the sixth through the ninth for both women and men for all populations. The highest incidence is found among men and women ages 80 or older. [193] Between 35 and 50% of all women over 50 had at least one vertebral fracture. In the United States, 700,000 vertebral fractures occur annually ...

  6. Hip pain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip_pain

    Hip avascular necrosis, cell death of bone tissue in the hip joint brought on by vascular occlusion or coagulation which is the result of old age, alcoholism, trauma, decompression sickness, or several other possible causes; the treatment is often total hip replacement; Occult hip fracture, a fine crack somewhere in the hip socket, common in ...

  7. Femoral fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femoral_fracture

    Fractures of the diaphysis, or middle of the femur, are managed differently from those at the head, neck, and trochanter; those are conventionally called hip fractures (because they involve the hip joint region). Thus, mentions of femoral fracture in medicine usually refer implicitly to femoral fractures at the shaft or distally.

  8. Pelvic fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelvic_fracture

    Pelvic fractures make up around 3% of adult fractures. [1] Stable fractures generally have a good outcome. [1] The risk of death with an unstable fracture is about 15%, while those who also have low blood pressure have a risk of death approaching 50%. [2] [4] Unstable fractures are often associated with injuries to other parts of the body. [3]

  9. Slipped capital femoral epiphysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slipped_capital_femoral...

    Stress on the hip causes the epiphysis to move posteriorly and medially, relative to the metaphysis. Although it is not the epiphysis that displaced, by convention, position and alignment in SCFE is described by referring to the relationship of the proximal fragment (capital femoral epiphysis) to the normal distal fragment (femoral neck).