avulsion wound - definição. O que é avulsion wound. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é avulsion wound - definição

ASPECT OF HISTORY
Wound treatment; Wound care; Wound doctor
  • [[Achilles]] tending [[Patroclus]] wounded by an arrow
(Attic red-figure kylix, c. 500 BC)
  • A glass container containing tubocurarine chloride. Tubocurarine was used in ancient times as a poison, but was used in the 20th century as a muscle relaxant.
  • This is a portrait of [[Joseph Lister]], who was the first doctor to begin to sterilize his surgical gauze.

Avulsion injury         
INJURY IN WHICH A BODY STRUCTURE IS FORCIBLY DETACHED FROM ITS NORMAL POINT OF INSERTION
Avulsion injuries; Flapper (Rock climbing); Avulsion (injury)
In medicine, an avulsion is an injury in which a body structure is torn off by either trauma or surgery (from the Latin avellere, meaning "to tear off"). The term most commonly refers to a surface trauma where all layers of the skin have been torn away, exposing the underlying structures (i.
Million-dollar wound         
Blighty wound; Million-Dollar Wound; Million dollar wound
"Million-dollar wound" (American English) or "Blighty wound" (British English) is military slang for a type of wound received in combat which is serious enough to get the soldier sent away from the fighting, but neither fatal nor permanently crippling.
History of wound care         
The history of wound care spans from prehistory to modern medicine. Wounds naturally heal by themselves, but hunter-gatherers would have noticed several factors and certain herbal remedies would speed up or assist the process, especially if it was grievous.

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History of wound care

The history of wound care spans from prehistory to modern medicine. Wounds naturally heal by themselves, but hunter-gatherers would have noticed several factors and certain herbal remedies would speed up or assist the process, especially if it was grievous. In ancient history, this was followed by the realisation of the necessity of hygiene and the halting of bleeding, where wound dressing techniques and surgery developed. Eventually the germ theory of disease also assisted in improving wound care.