1 / 21

Injuries to Muscles and Bones

Injuries to Muscles and Bones. Lesson 14. Musculoskeletal System Review. Bones Muscles Tendons Ligaments. Primary Functions of Musculoskeletal System. Provides shape/support for body Muscles acting on bones allow movement Bones protect vital internal organs . Types of Muscles.

carney
Télécharger la présentation

Injuries to Muscles and Bones

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Injuries to Muscles and Bones Lesson 14

  2. Musculoskeletal System Review • Bones • Muscles • Tendons • Ligaments

  3. Primary Functions of Musculoskeletal System • Provides shape/support for body • Muscles acting on bones allow movement • Bones protect vital internal organs

  4. Types of Muscles • Skeletal muscles are voluntary • Smooth muscles are involuntary • Cardiac muscle is involuntary • All muscle activity controlled by nervous system

  5. Mechanisms of Injury to Musculoskeletal System • Direct force: force applied directly to body • Indirect force: force transferred from original body site along an extremity to another point • Twisting forces: part of body forced to move in unnatural direction

  6. Factors Involved in Injuries • The greater the force: • the more severe the injury • fracture/joint dislocation more likely • Patient’s age and health status

  7. Types of Musculoskeletal Injuries • First Responders not responsible for determining type of musculoskeletal injury: • Fractures • Dislocations • Sprains • Muscle injuries

  8. Fractures • The bone may be completely broken or only cracked • Closed fracture - skin not broken • Open fracture - open wound at site

  9. Dislocations

  10. Dislocations • One or more bones at joint displaced from normal position • Ligaments holding bone are torn • Result from strong forces • Sometimes accompanied by bone fractures or other injuries

  11. Dislocations continued • Patient cannot use the joint due to pain/structural damage • Serious bleeding may result • Nearby nerves may be injured • With severe dislocation, joint/limb will look deformed

  12. Sprains • Joint injury involving ligament stretching/tearing • Typically occur when joint overextended • Can be mild or severe • Ankles, knees, wrists, fingers most common • Considerable swelling often occurs rapidly

  13. Muscle Injuries • Strains, contusions, cramps • Usually less serious than fractures/joint injuries • Many causes

  14. Recognizing Musculoskeletal Injury • Sometimes injury type is obvious • Often you will recognize musculoskeletal injury is present • Emergency care is same regardless of injury type • Usually not life threatening • May be serious and result in pain/disability

  15. Assessment of Musculoskeletal Injuries • Perform standard assessment • Ask patient what happened/what he/she felt • If large forces involved, consider potential for spinal injury • Expose injury site • Amount of pain/swelling not indicator of injury severity • Immediate medical treatment if no circulation/possible nerve damage

  16. Assess for Circulation, Sensation, And Movement (CSM) Below the Injury Site • Check pulse below injury • Check skin color and temperature. • Touch fingers/toes • Does patient feel touch, tingling sensation, numbness. • Have patient wiggle fingers/toes

  17. Signs and Symptoms

  18. Signs and Symptoms • Abnormal sensation (numbness, tingling) • Inability to move area • Difference in temperature

  19. Preventing Movement • Movement causes injury, pain, swelling • Bone movement further injures soft tissues • Movement generally increases blood flow - may increase internal bleeding/ swelling • Manually stabilize or splint injured area

  20. Emergency Care of Musculoskeletal Injuries • Perform standard patient care • Control any life threats • Allow patient to be in position of comfort • Cover open wounds with sterile dressing • Apply cold pack • Don’t replace protruding bones

  21. Emergency Care of Musculoskeletal Injuries Continued • Stabilize injured extremity manually • Support above and below injury • If appropriate, splint extremity • Follow local protocol re: oxygen

More Related