Sentences with phrase «fractured skull bones»

Not exact matches

By the time Archie reached Charity Hospital, he'd suffered a host of injuries, including broken facial bones and skull fractures, leading hospital staffers to conclude he had been kicked repeatedly, medical records show.
It's true that young infants are more likely to experience a skull fracture, because their bones are softer.
In addition, the infection that is eating away at the bone from below can eventually make its way into the skull and jaw bone causing a chronic painful condition caused osteomyelitis that can take several months of antibiotics to eradicate, and in some cases, can weaken the bone so much that cats can develop what is called a pathologic fracture, where the bone breaks with the slightest bit of pressure.
Screaming apparitions, bruised and gouged with bleeding eyeballs falling out of fractured skulls and snapped bones popping up through ruptured skin.
They are usually a result of a skull fracture, as bone fragments may tear the meningeal artery that runs just beneath the skull.
Broken Bones: Broken bones sustained in a motorcycle accident can include arms, legs, cracked skull, broken ankles, broken ribs, wrist fractures, hip fractures, broken femur, and even injury to the spinal cord.
In this week's case (Moore v. Briggs) the Plaintiff suffered a fractured skull (fractured left temporal bone) and a brain injury in a 2003 assault.
Common risks to the baby from the performance of a Caesarean section include fractures to the skull or long bones, lacerations to the baby's skin, serious brain or nerve damage, organ damage, and breathing problems when a baby is delivered before its due date.
It is also possible for victims to sustain a bone fracture in their hip, wrist, ankle, vertebrae or skull.
Those factors ended up costing the plaintiff nearly half of the verdict in comparative negligence, Brody believes, but he still walked away with $ 1.79 million — which totaled $ 2.25 million with interest — after suffering a fractured skull and clavicle bone, broken ribs and short - term amnesia.
By protecting the player's skull from an open fracture, his face from broken bones and his teeth from getting knocked out, the modern helmet has encouraged players to collide more violently and more often without fear for their own safety.
$ 5,000: Fracture of the skull (dome of the skull), spine (including coccyx), pelvis or femur $ 1,500: Fracture of a rib or the sternum, scapula, humerus, patella, tibia or fibula $ 750: Fracture of a bone not listed above
$ 5,000: Fracture of the skull (dome of the skull), spine (excluding coccyx), pelvis or femur $ 1,500: Fracture of a rib, sternum, scapula, humerus, patella, tibia, fibula, larynx and trachea $ 750: Fracture of a bone not listed above (including coccyx)
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