Title: Bone Healing Objectives
1Bone Healing Objectives
- Elaina Turner
- August 2nd 2005
2Bone healing is divided into direct and indirect
healing. What conditions are required for direct
bone healing to occur?
- Occurs with anatomical alignment and absolute
stability and if a gap is present it must be less
than 1mm.
3What conditions will lead to indirect bone
healing?
- Interfragmentary deformation, impaired blood
supply or fracture gap greater than 1mm.
4Which type is more common?
5Is there a difference in strength of bone that
results from the 2 types of bone healing?
6Indirect bone healing is divided into 4 stages.
Describe the events of each stage. In general
terms, including approximate timing.
- Inflammation
- Begins w/ fx and ends w/ fibrous tissue or
cartilage formation. Hematoma is formed, becomes
organized, granulation tissue formation. - Soft callus
- Begins in 3 to 4 days with the appearance of
granulation tissue, matures into fibrous tissue
and firbrocartilage, stabilizes site w/ internal
and external callus, pain and inflammation end. - Hard callus
- May last up to 2 mths. Mineralization and
conversion to bone. Endochondral ossification of
fibrocartilage forming cancellous bone. - Remodeling
- May require yrs for completion. Cancellous bone
is remodeled to longitudinally oriented lamellar
bone. Contour of bone is restored. Contour is
less perfectly restored in older animal.
7Which stage is the longest?
8The remodeling stage of bone healing is mediated
by Wolffs Law. What is Wolffs Law?
9How is it translated into an effect on the bone?
- Bone is laid down in accordance to stress placed
upon it.
10What does this tell you about the relationship
between use of the fractured bone and remodeling?
- Bone that is not used, especially with a fracture
will experience a delay in healing because of its
lack of function.
11Is use of the bone beneficial in other stages of
bone healing?
- Yes it is beneficial in all stages of healing???
12Direct bone healing is divided into 3 subtypes.
Describe the conditions under which subtype will
occur.
- Contact healing
- Anatomical alignment and absolute stability
- Gap healing
- Stability of fracture fragments w/ a gap less
than 1mm between fragments. - Secondary osteonal reconstruction
- Occurs with pin and wire stabilization of oblique
fractures.
13What are the different events that occur in these
subtypes.
- Contact
- Bone absorption and formation occur
simultaneously, cutting cone of osteoclasts
crosses fracture plane, followed by osteoblasts,
cone advances at 50 to 80 um/day. - Gap Healing
- Gap fills w/ blood, at 2wks osteoblasts deposit
lamellar bone in gap perpendicular to fragments,
3-4wks cutting cones in new bone and fragment
ends cross fracutre plane, new lamellar bone
becomes longitudinally oriented. - Secondary osteonal reconstruction
- Bone resorption of fragment ends, external callus
is formed, implant allows for rapid bridging of
external callus, if gap is small then gap healing
occurs, if gap is large then indirect healing
occurs.
14When are bone grafts commonly used?
15What are the classifications of bone grafts,
based on a) type of donor used b) type of bone
used?
- A
- Autograft patients own bone
- Allograft bone from another individual of same
species as patient - Xenograft bone from individual of another
species - B
- Cancelloous
- Cortical
- Cortical-cancellous
16In what 3 ways do bone grafts promote
osteogenesis?
- Graft provides cells directly
- Osteoinduction
- Osteoconduction
17For each of the previous 3 ways, which type of
graft is used?
- Graft provides cells directly
- Cancellous graft
- Osteoinduction
- Cancellous graft
- Osteoconduction
- Cancellous graft, cortical graft
18What is another function of bone grafts?
19Which type of graft is used for this function?
20Where and how are cancellous and
cortical-cancellous bone grafts collected in dogs
and cats?
- Cancellous
- Hole is drilled through cortex with IM pin or
bone drill, bone is harvested with bone curette,
keep on moist sponge - Proximal humerus, proximal tibia, wing of ilium.
- Cortical-cancellous
- Bone is cut with osteotome, oscillating saw or
bone cutter - Rib, iliac crest