Fractures of the skull which may result from penetrating or nonpenetrating head injuries or rarely BONE DISEASES (see also FRACTURES, SPONTANEOUS). Skull fractures may be classified by location (e.g., SKULL FRACTURE, BASILAR), radiographic appearance (e.g., linear), or based upon cranial integrity (e.g., SKULL FRACTURE, DEPRESSED)
Fractures due to the strain caused by repetitive exercise. They are thought to arise from a combination of MUSCLE FATIGUE and bone failure, and occur in situations where BONE REMODELING predominates over repair. The most common sites of stress fractures are the METATARSUS; FIBULA; TIBIA; and FEMORAL NECK
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Textile fibers -- Fracture : Atlas of fibre fracture and damage to textiles / J.W.S. Hearle, B. Lomas, W.D. Cooke
1998
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Titanium alloys -- Fracture. : Titanium alloys : an atlas of structures and fracture features / Vydehi Arun Joshi
2006
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Titanium alloys -- Fracture -- Congresses. : Toughness and fracture behavior of titanium : a symposium presented at May committee week, American Society for Testing and Materials, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 1-6 May 1977 / R.G. Broadwell and C.F. Hickey, Jr., symposium co-chairmen
1978
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Tool-steel -- Fracture : Lifetime controlling defects in tool steels / Christian Rudolf Sohar
Wood pellets -- Fracture : ON THE DEGRADATION OF WOOD PELLETS DURING PNEUMATIC CONVEYING experiments and dem-cfd simulations
2021
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Zirconium alloys -- Fracture : The effect of hydrogen and hydrides on the integrity of zirconium alloy components : delayed hydride cracking / Manfred P. Puls
2012
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Fractured nursery rhyme : The cow tripped over the moon / written by Tony Wilson ; illustrated by Laura Wood
Fractures, Bone -- nursing. : The skeletal system and the muscular system / edited by Janet T.E. Riddle ; with contributions from Kathleen B. Nicoll, Isabella I. Rowantree