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  2. Spinal fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinal_fracture

    A spinal fracture, also called a vertebral fracture or a broken back, is a fracture affecting the vertebrae of the spinal column. Most types of spinal fracture confer a significant risk of spinal cord injury. After the immediate trauma, there is a risk of spinal cord injury (or worsening of an already injured spine) if the fracture is unstable ...

  3. Burst fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burst_fracture

    A burst fracture is a type of traumatic spinal injury in which a vertebra breaks from a high-energy axial load (e.g., traffic collisions or falls from a great height or high speed, and some kinds of seizures), with shards of vertebra penetrating surrounding tissues and sometimes the spinal canal. [1] The burst fracture is categorized by the ...

  4. Chance fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chance_fracture

    The fracture is often unstable. [1] Treatment may be conservative with the use of a brace or via surgery. [1] The fracture is currently rare. [7] It was first described by G. Q. Chance, a radiologist from Manchester, UK, in 1948. [3] [13] The fracture was more common in the 1950s and 1960s before shoulder harnesses became common. [3] [5]

  5. Tile classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tile_classification

    A - stable: Innominate bone avulsion or wing fracture Stable ring fracture with intact posterior arch Denis III transverse sacral fracture B - rotationally unstable/vertically stable: Open-book external rotation injury Young-Burgess lateral compression type internal rotation injury Bilateral C - rotationally and vertically unstable

  6. Clay-shoveler fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clay-shoveler_fracture

    Clay-shoveler's fracture is a stable fracture through the spinous process of a vertebra occurring at any of the lower cervical or upper thoracic vertebrae, classically at C6 or C7. [1] In Australia in the 1930s, men digging deep ditches tossed clay 10 to 15 feet above their heads using long handled shovels. [ 2 ]

  7. Hangman's fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hangman's_fracture

    The C2 fracture accounts for nearly 19% of spinal fractures [10] and 55% of cervical fractures (in patients with head injury). Within C2 fractures, the hangman's fracture accounts for 23% of occurrences while the odontoid or dens fracture accounts for 55% of them. [2]

  8. Learned Helplessness Is Holding You Back. Here's How To ...

    www.aol.com/learned-helplessness-holding-back...

    Permanence (Stable vs. Unstable) Someone with a permanent explanatory style interprets negative experiences as being permanent, Parks says, while someone with an impermanent explanatory style ...

  9. Jefferson fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jefferson_fracture

    A Jefferson fracture is a bone fracture of the anterior and posterior arches of the C1 vertebra, [1] though it may also appear as a three- or two-part fracture. The fracture may result from an axial load on the back of the head or hyperextension of the neck (e.g. caused by diving), causing a posterior break, and may be accompanied by a break in other parts of the cervical spine.

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