My Crossword Maker Logo
Powered by BrightSprout
Save Status:
or to save your progress. The page will not refresh.
Controls:
SPACEBAR SWITCHES TYPING DIRECTION
Answer Key:
Edit a Copy:
Make Your Own:
Crucigrama Sopa de Letras Hoja de Trabajo
Calificar este Puzzle:
Log in or sign up to rate this puzzle.

Chapter 32a- Orthopaedic Injuries

Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition
Horizontales
Blood in the urine.
Disruption of a joint in which ligaments are damaged in the bone ends are no longer in contact.
Movement that occurs in a bone at a point where there is no joint indicating a fracture; also called free movement.
Swelling in a confined space that produces dangerous pressure; may cut off blood flow or damage sensitive tissue.
An injury in which part of the body is completely severed.
The place where two bones come into contact.
The heel bone.
A simple joint, where the bony projections of the scapula and the clavicle meet at the top of the shoulder.
A device to split the phony pelvis to reduce hemorrhage from bone and Venus disruption and pain.
Bands of fibrous tissue that connects bones to bones. Ligaments support and strengthen a joint.
The part of the scapula that joins with the humeral head to form the glenohumeral joint.
A grating or grinding sensation or sound caused by fractured bone ends or joints, rubbing together.
Any break and a bone in which the overlaying skin is not broken.
A fraction which bone fragments are separated from one another, producing deformity in the limb.
Bruising or discoloration associated with bleeding within or under the skin.
Verticales
The fiberlike , connective tissue that covers arteries, veins, tendons, and ligaments.
Tenderness that is sharply localized at the site of the injury, found by gently palpating a long bone with the tip of one finger.
A simple crack in the bone that has not cause the bone to move from its normal atomic position; also called a hairline fracture.
The outer and smaller bone of the two bones of the lower leg.
Any break in a bone in which the overlying skin has been broken.
A break in the continuity of a bone.