Fracture Healing - Bone's Break & Mend
- Healing Types:
- Primary (Direct): Rigid fixation, no callus. Gap < 200 µm.
- Secondary (Indirect): Commonest, involves callus, tolerates some motion.
- Secondary Healing Stages:
- 1. Hematoma/Inflammation (0-7 days): Clot, inflammatory cells, growth factors.
- 2. Soft Callus (1-3 wks): Granulation tissue, fibrocartilage (fibroblasts/chondrocytes). Initial stability.
- 3. Hard Callus (3-12 wks): Woven bone via endochondral ossification. Osteoblasts active.
- 4. Remodeling (months-yrs): Woven bone → lamellar bone. Medullary canal restored. Wolff's Law.

⭐ Wolff's Law: Bone remodels along lines of mechanical stress, adapting structure to demands.
Fracture Healing Stages - The Repair Crew
Fracture healing is a dynamic, multi-stage process restoring bone integrity. Most common is indirect (secondary) healing with callus formation.
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Stage 1: Haematoma & Inflammation (0-7 days)
- Blood clot (haematoma) forms, fibrin mesh.
- Influx of neutrophils, macrophages.
- Release of cytokines & growth factors (PDGF, TGF-β).
- Granulation tissue begins.

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Stage 2: Soft Callus Formation (1-3 weeks)
- Fibroblasts & chondroblasts proliferate.
- Haematoma replaced by fibrocartilaginous (soft) callus.
- Provides initial stability; not for weight-bearing.
⭐ Soft callus is typically visible on X-ray by 2-3 weeks.
-
Stage 3: Hard Callus Formation (3-12 weeks)
- Endochondral ossification: soft callus → woven bone by osteoblasts.
- Mineralization increases callus strength.
- Clinical union: no pain/movement at fracture site.
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Stage 4: Remodelling (Months to Years)
- Woven bone gradually replaced by lamellar bone.
- Medullary canal restored.
- Bone reshaped by osteoclastic & osteoblastic activity (Wolff's Law).
- Radiological union: fracture line disappears.
Fracture Healing Factors - Boosters & Blockers
- Boosters (Promote Healing):
- Systemic Factors:
- Young age, good health
- Nutrition (Protein, Vit C, D, $Ca^{2+}$)
- Hormones (GH, Thyroid, Calcitonin)
- Local Factors:
- Good vascularity
- Immobilization & stability
- Growth factors (BMPs, TGF-β)
- Minimal tissue damage, no infection
- Systemic Factors:
- Blockers (Impair Healing):
- Systemic Factors:
- Old age, malnutrition, smoking
- Corticosteroids, NSAIDs (esp. early phase)
- DM, severe anemia, hypoxia
- Cytotoxic drugs, Immunosuppression
- Local Factors:
- Infection
- Poor vascularity (AVN risk)
- Instability / movement, large gap
- Soft tissue interposition, severe comminution
- Bone loss, malignancy
- Systemic Factors:
⭐ Infection is the most common cause of delayed union and non-union.
Fracture Healing Complications - When Mends Go Awry
- Malunion: Heals in a non-anatomical position.
- Angular or rotational deformity.
- Delayed Union: Healing takes longer than expected (typically >3-6 months).
- Causes: Poor blood supply, infection, inadequate immobilization.
- Nonunion: Failure of fracture to heal by >6-9 months.
- Types: Hypertrophic (elephant foot), Atrophic (pencil point), Oligotrophic.
- Requires intervention (e.g., bone graft, internal fixation).
- Avascular Necrosis (AVN): Bone death due to ↓ blood supply.
- Common sites: Femoral head, scaphoid, talus.
- Compartment Syndrome: ↑ pressure within a fascial compartment.
- Leads to muscle and nerve ischemia.
- ⚠️ Surgical emergency: Fasciotomy.
- Infection (Osteomyelitis): Bacterial contamination.
- Pseudoarthrosis: False joint formation at nonunion site.
- Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS): Chronic pain, swelling, autonomic dysfunction.
⭐ Hypertrophic nonunion often indicates good vascularity but poor stability, whereas atrophic nonunion suggests poor vascularity and biology at the fracture site.
- Fat Embolism Syndrome: Fat globules enter circulation, common in long bone fractures (femur, tibia).
- Triad: Respiratory distress, neurological symptoms, petechial rash (📌 Fat Embolism Syndrome = Fever, Encephalopathy, Skin rash).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Fracture healing stages: Hematoma, inflammation, soft callus (fibrocartilage), hard callus (woven bone), remodeling (lamellar bone).
- Primary healing: Occurs with rigid fixation, no external callus, direct Haversian remodeling.
- Secondary healing: Most common, involves granulation tissue, callus formation, endochondral ossification.
- Key cells: Platelets, macrophages, fibroblasts, chondroblasts, osteoblasts, osteoclasts.
- Critical growth factors: BMPs (Bone Morphogenetic Proteins), TGF-β, PDGF, FGF.
- Factors impairing healing: Instability, poor vascularity, infection, NSAIDs, smoking, diabetes.
- Complications: Delayed union, non-union (hypertrophic/atrophic), malunion, pseudoarthrosis.
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