Sprains and Joint Pain



SPRAINS, STRAIN, FRACTURE, AND DISLOCATIONS

Traumatic injuries cause damage to tissues. The incidental rupturing of ancillary and primary blood vessels supplying these tissues internally bleed at the site of trauma. The blood supplies normally bring nutrients, oxygen, and remove waste materials and metabolic by-products from tissues. With damage, the delicate piping systems of blood vessels rupture at smaller capillary, aterioli, venule, and even in larger blood vessels yielding profuse bleeding. This bleeding is what causes the swelling at the site of the injury. The injury is enclosed within the skin creating increased fluid/blood pressure inside the body. When the traumatic site fills and expands with bleeding, it tamponades the traumatic site. This occurs by increasing he site