Hanging
Any injury resulting from a mechanism of injury. Trauma is any injury to the body as a result of some type of force impacting the body from outside causes. These can include things like falls, vehicle accidents, bullets, knife, fire, tornado's, electrocution excetera.
Identifying the mechanism of injury for a trauma patient is crucial because it helps clinicians assess the potential severity and type of injuries sustained. Understanding how the injury occurred aids in prioritizing diagnostic tests and treatment options, as certain mechanisms are associated with specific injury patterns. This information can also guide the need for interdisciplinary consultations and inform decisions regarding surgical interventions or further imaging studies. Ultimately, it enhances patient safety and improves outcomes by ensuring appropriate and timely care.
injury, wound, shock.
sciatica
TRAUMA
Inflammation is the response of the tissue to injury. This can be physical trauma, chemical trauma due to chemicals or toxins or infection
Dental trauma is injury to the mouth, including teeth, lips, gums, tongue, and jawbones. The most common dental trauma is a broken or lost tooth.
Any kind of chest trauma or brain injury can affect the mechanics of breathing.
The simple answer here is no. An area of injury may bruise before, during, or after swelling. Depending on the location of the injury, the mechanism of injury, and the time of injury. If the injury is superficial in location, such as a blunt trauma to the skin overlying the thigh, it is common for bruising to occur in conjunction with the swelling. However, these two injury markers are not always present together. For instance, a knee injury will often cause inflammation and swelling of the joint, without any external evidence of bruising. Generally speaking, bruising is a superficial response to injury.
Trauma, injury to the affected area.
A+ blunt force brain trauma
balls in yo mouth