Discussion 14.1: An 11-year-old boy presents to the emergency room (ER) with a 4-inch laceration on his right arm. He was with his friends doing bicycle stunts when he fell off his bike and cut his arm on a rusty nail from the ramp. In addition, his wrist is swollen, bruised, tender to touch, and warm, with limited mobility. He will most likely need stitches to close the laceration and a splint for the sprain
Discussion 14.1: An 11-year-old boy presents to the emergency room (ER) with a 4-inch laceration on his right arm. He was with his friends doing bicycle stunts when he fell off his bike and cut his arm on a rusty nail from the ramp. In addition, his wrist is swollen, bruised, tender to touch, and warm, with limited mobility. He will most likely need stitches to close the laceration and a splint for the sprain
Value: 10 points
Introduction
An 11-year-old boy presents to the emergency room (ER) with a 4-inch laceration on his right arm. He was with his friends doing bicycle stunts when he fell off his bike and cut his arm on a rusty nail from the ramp. In addition, his wrist is swollen, bruised, tender to touch, and warm, with limited mobility. He will most likely need stitches to close the laceration and a splint for the sprain.
ORDER A CUSTOMIZED, PLAGIARISM-FREE Discussion 14.1: An 11-year-old boy presents to the emergency room (ER) with a 4-inch laceration on his right arm. He was with his friends doing bicycle stunts when he fell off his bike and cut his arm on a rusty nail from the ramp. In addition, his wrist is swollen, bruised, tender to touch, and warm, with limited mobility. He will most likely need stitches to close the laceration and a splint for the sprain HERE
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Discussion Guidelines
Initial Post
In your initial post, answer the following questions:
After treatment, as he prepares to leave, you give him last-minute care instructions for laceration and sprain. What would be important for this boy to know to prevent further health concerns with his injuries?
The boy concernedly asks you, “My uncle lost his foot because he got gangrene in it. Am I going to lose my arm if I get an infection in this cut?” How would you respond?
Response Post(s)
Reply to at least two of your classmates’ initial posts by Sunday.
Submission
Post your initial and follow up responses and review full grading criteria on the Discussion 14.1: Disorders of Musculoskeletal Function: Trauma, Infection, Neoplasms page.
Lesson 1: Musculoskeletal Structure, Function, and Disorders
The purpose of this lesson is to understand the roles of the musculoskeletal systems, how they function and are regulated, and to describe dysfunction associated with each system.
Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
Bone Structure and Function
Describe bone development and classification
Explain bone deposition and resorption, and how this process is regulated
Muscle Structure and Function
Describe the function of muscles, and the properties of muscle that allow them to function as they do
Describe muscle morphology from the microscopic level to the macroscopic level. The student should be able to define, and understand the role of, the terms: sarcomere, actin, myosin, troponin, tropomyosin, t-tubule system, sarcoplasmic reticulum, and neuromuscular junction
Explain how muscle contraction occurs
Describe a motor unit, which is the motor neuron and all the muscle fibers (cells) it innervates
Explain muscle metabolism
Describe the clinical role or use of neuromuscular blocking agents, cholinesterase inhibitors, and anti-muscarinics
Understand that muscular dystrophy is caused by a metabolic defect. The student should learn that muscular dystrophic conditions are classified by the mode of inheritance, the speed of onset, the area initially affected, and the rate of progression
Compare and contrast physiologic and pathologic contractures
Describe three muscle metabolic disorders that are caused by alterations to energy sources
Compare myotonic disorders and periodic paralysis resulting from hyperexcitable membranes
Characterize the abnormalities associated with developmental dysplasia of the hip and methods of diagnosis and treatment
Differentiate between congenital, idiopathic, and neuromuscular scoliosis
Define osteopenia and osteoporosis
List the risk factors associated with osteoporosis, and describe how the condition is diagnosed and treated
Compare and contrast the bone softening disorders osteomalacia, rickets, and Paget’s disease
Before attempting to complete your learning activities for this week, review the following learning materials:
Learning Materials
Read the following in your Porth’s Pathophysiology: Concepts of Altered Health States textbook:
Chapter 47, “Structure and Function of the Musculoskeletal System”
Chapter 48, “Disorders of Musculoskeletal Function: Trauma, Infection, Neoplasms”
Note that the Musculoskeletal Disorders presentation does not follow linearly from the book chapters.