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Comminuted fracture belongs to the level of disability depends on the specific situation, it is recommended to go to the hospital for identification, the following can be referred to:
Grade 1 limb injury causes:
a) Absence of more than three limbs (upper limb above wrist and lower limb above ankle);
b) Absence of both limbs (upper limb above elbow and lower limb above knee) and loss of function of more than 50% of the other limb.
c) Absence of two limbs (upper limb above wrist joint, lower limb above ankle joint), complete loss of function of third limb;
d) Absence of one limb (upper limb above elbow and lower limb above ankle), complete loss of function of the second limb and loss of function of more than 50% of the third limb;
e) Absence of one limb (upper limb above wrist and lower limb above ankle) and complete loss of function of the other two limb;
f) Complete loss of function of all three limbs.
Grade 2 limb injury:
a) Absence of both limbs (upper limb above elbow and lower limb above knee);
b) Absence of one limb (upper limb above elbow and lower limb above knee) and complete loss of function of the other limb;
c) Complete loss of function above the two limbs.
Grade 3 limb injury causes:
a) Absence of both limbs (upper limb above wrist and lower limb above ankle);
b) Absence of one limb (upper limb above elbow and lower limb above knee) and loss of function of more than 50% of the other limb;
c) Absence of one limb (upper limb above wrist and lower limb above ankle) and complete loss of function of the other limb;
d) Complete loss of function in one limb and loss of more than 50% in the other. Grade 4 limb injury resulting in complete loss or loss of function of both hands.
Grade 5 limb injury causes:
a) Absence (or loss of function) of both hands 90 or more;
b) Absence of one limb (upper limb above elbow and lower limb above knee);
c) Absence of one limb (upper limb above wrist and lower limb above ankle) and loss of function of more than 50% of the other limb;
d) Complete loss of function of one limb.
Grade 6 limb injury causes:
a) Absence (or loss of function) of both hands 70 or more;
b) absence above the tarsometatarsal joints of both feet;
c) Absence of one limb (upper limb above wrist and lower limb above ankle).
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Where is the fracture located? It depends on the degree of recovery after the end of the ** to know how much the disability level is. The level of disability cannot be determined without going through **. Unless you keep his car, you have to let it go after a while.
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Grades 1 to 4 are completely incapacitated, grades 5 to 6 are mostly incapacitated, and grades 7 to 10 are partially incapacitated, but I understand that it is grade 7 (one foot 1-5 toes are missing, one foot except the thumb, other four toes are scarred and deformed, complete loss of function, a forefoot is missing, postoperative artificial joints of large joints of the limbs, basic diseases can take care of themselves, traumatic arthritis of the large joints of the limbs, long-term repeated fluid accumulation, etc.), the specific level of work-related injury identification results only know.
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Please ask. 1. Is it a traffic accident or a work-related injury?
2. What is the injury? (i.e. the hospital's diagnosis) is it surgical?
What exactly are you trying to ask? People or cars?
If you want to car, please ask the accident handling traffic police!
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Disability rating of comminuted fractures: The disability rating of comminuted fractures is generally grade 9 and grade 10, and different grades are given to comminuted fractures according to different situations. The ninth level is:
Comminuted fracture of a vertebral body, bony mass in the spinal canal; Two or more pelvic fractures or comminuted fractures, severe malunion; Comminuted fractures of both calcanes. Grade 10 is: a vertebral compression fracture (compression degree up to 1 3) or comminuted fracture; 1. Vertebral fracture after surgery**; 1. Comminuted fracture of the calcane, malunion; Two or more fractures or comminuted fractures of the pelvis, malunion and malunion.
Legal basis: The "Standards for the Appraisal of the Degree of Human Injury" stipulates: spine, pelvic and limb injuries.
1) Comminuted fracture of a vertebral body, bony mass in the spinal canal;
2) Fracture of one vertebral body and corresponding adnexa, after surgery**; 2. Compression fracture of the vertebral body;
3) More than two pelvic fractures or comminuted fractures, severe malunion;
4) Comminuted or compression fracture of the long bones and epiphysis of the extremities of adolescents;
5) After joint prosthesis replacement for any major joint of the limbs;
6) The loss of rotational function of both upper limbs and forearms was 75%;
7) The difference in the length of the two upper limbs is more than that;
8) The difference in the length of the lower limbs is more than that;
9) Loss of function of any major joint of the limbs (except ankle joint) by more than 50%;
10) Loss of more than 75% of the function of the ankle joint;
11) The loss of function of all major joints of one limb is up to 25%;
12) 75% loss of hallux function in both feet; Complete loss of function of all 5 toes of one foot;
13) Comminuted fracture of both calcanes;
The "Standards for the Identification of the Degree of Human Injury" stipulates: spine, pelvis and limb injuries.
1) Fracture of the odontoid process of the pivotal vertebrae, affecting function;
2) a vertebral compression fracture (compression degree up to 1 3) or comminuted fracture; 1. Vertebral fracture after surgery**;
3) Fracture of more than four transverse processes, spinous processes or pedicles, affecting function;
4) Two or more pelvic fractures or comminuted fractures, malunion and malunion;
5) resection of one patella;
6) Cruciate ligament and meniscus with collateral ligament laceration of one side of the knee after surgery**, affecting the function;
7) long bone fractures of the limbs in adolescents involving the epiphysis;
8) Loss of rotation function of the forearm of the upper limb by more than 75%;
9) The difference in length between the two upper limbs is more than that;
10) The difference in the length of the two lower limbs is more than that;
11) Loss of function of any major joint of the limbs (except ankle joint) by more than 25%;
12) Loss of more than 50% of the function of the ankle joint;
13) Traumatic arthritis after fracture of any major joint of the lower limbs;
14) Circulatory disorders of important blood vessels of the limbs, affecting function;
15) complete loss of the little finger of one hand and partial defect of the fifth metacarpal bone;
16) loss of hallux function of one foot by more than 75%; The loss of function of one foot and 5 toes is 50%; 50% loss of hallux function in both feet; Complete loss of function of any 4 toes in both feet except the hallux;
17) Comminuted fracture of the calcane, malunion.
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Comminuted fractures are generally grade 8 to 9, and the specific level is subject to the appraisal made by the appraisal agency.
[Legal basis].Article 18 of the General Principles of Judicial Appraisal Procedures.
After a forensic appraisal institution accepts an appraisal entrustment, it shall designate a forensic evaluator with the institution's professional qualifications for the appraisal matter to conduct the evaluation. Where the client has special requirements, upon mutual agreement, a qualified forensic evaluator may also be selected from that institution to conduct the evaluation. Clients must not request or imply that forensic appraisal establishments or forensic evaluators provide appraisal opinions in accordance with their intentions or specific purposes.
Article 19. Forensic appraisal establishments shall designate or select two forensic evaluators to conduct evaluations of the same appraisal matter; For complex, difficult, or special appraisal matters, multiple judicial evaluators may be designated or selected to conduct the appraisal.
Article 36.
Forensic evaluation institutions and forensic evaluators shall draft forensic evaluation opinions in accordance with the uniform text format.
The disability appraisal of comminuted fractures is generally grade 8 to 9, and the specific level is subject to the appraisal made by the appraisal institution. The parties shall provide true, complete, and sufficient appraisal materials to the forensic appraisal body, and be responsible for the authenticity and legality of the appraisal materials. >>>More
How long does it take for the fracture to return to normal, what method do you choose**, if you choose pure Chinese medicine** fracture, you only need to use a simple external splint to fix, and then use wild herbs to quickly apply the bone, early medication for adult fractures, the pain can be basically reduced in about 7 days, and the swelling can gradually subside, and the splint can be removed in 10 days, and you can basically return to normal activities in about 30 days. 40 days to take a film to see that the callus grows well, after surgery, about 40-50 days can basically return to normal activities, if the medication **50 days or so can not be basic**, then consider the level of the doctor of the fracture. >>>More
Avulsion fracture, due to ligament traction, the bone at the ligament attachment site is peeled off along with the ligament, forming a bone fragment, which is called an avulsion fracture. Conditionally, it can be administered locally, so that the drug can quickly penetrate into the injured part, quickly relieve pain and swelling, promote blood circulation and eliminate stasis, and continue the tendons to achieve the purpose, and it is safe and reliable, and generally 2-3 side drugs have reached the clinical standard.
If CT does not show bone fragments in the lumbar spinal canal, no neurological symptoms, and is accompanied by severe osteoporosis and other serious medical diseases, and cannot be operated**, you can also stay in bed conservative**, the time may need to be longer, and you can also customize a brace to protect early walking. The bone block in front of the vertebral body generally does not need to be treated Age is generally not the main problem, the main thing is whether the elderly have cardiovascular and cerebrovascular, diabetes and other medical diseases, and the internal medicine and anesthesiology department need to evaluate the risk of surgery, if you simply open the neuraxial decompression surgery, at most 1 hour, the bleeding will not be much, if you want to carry out neuraxial decompression, there is generally more bleeding, and the elderly who are usually not in good health should think twice I don't think the doctor meant to say that you can't walk, you should say that you should avoid weight-bearing walking at present, In order to avoid the occurrence of lumbar kyphosis deformity or late-onset spinal stenosis in the future, if you really don't want to operate, it is recommended to stay in bed for 3 months, if you really can't lie down, it is best to customize a brace and then walk on the ground. In fact, many elderly people have multiple thoracic compression fractures caused by hunchback, if the vertebral body collapses no more than half, there is no bone in the spinal canal, there are no nerve symptoms, and surgery can also be done.
Compression fracture is a wedge-shaped fracture, the fracture heals well, and it cannot change the shape, the pain at the fracture site is not good for fracture healing.