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Risk factors for fractures in Tromsø : the Tromsø study

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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26314
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Ahmed_2005_ISM skriftserie nr. 84.pdf (6.423Mb)
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Date
2005
Type
Doctoral thesis
Doktorgradsavhandling

Author
Ahmed, Luai Awad
Abstract

A fracture is a break or crack in a bone. Fractures are common and anyone can fracture a bone. They occur when the bone can not withstand the physical force excerpted on it. There are several types or classifications of fracture; simple, stress, comminuted, impact, compound, complete and incomplete. Depending on the type and location of a fracture, the treatment varies from immobilization using cast or splint to surgical intervention. Before the availability of radiographic techniques, surgeons relied on knowledge of dissected specimens and clinical evidence in determining the nature of the injury. Modem treatment of fractures began several years after the discovery of X-rays at the end of the nineteenth century.

With the explosion of epidemiologic activity just after the Second World War, there was increased awareness of the increasing incidence of fractures especially among the elderly, and several studies about the epidemiology of fractures were published. Thereafter studies have shown an increasing incidence of all types of fractures. Recently a levelling out or even decreasing trends in hip fracture incidence have been described.
The seriousness of a fracture depends on the location of the fracture and the age of the individual who suffered the fracture. Although fractures can affect any person worldwide, increasing incidence of fractures among the elderly population constitutes a demanding health problem in the western world during the last decades. Older adults suffer more from fractures as their bones are more likely to be brittle and therefore need less force to fracture. When occurring in the elderly or as a result of minimal trauma (falling from standing height) fractures are considered to be osteoporotic.
Publisher
Universitetet i Tromsø
University of Tromsø
Series
ISM skriftserie Nr. 84, 2005
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  • ISM skriftserie [161]
Copyright 2005 The Author(s)

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