Broken Radius
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“When a bone is broken, blood trickles out between the injured parts, and afterwards gives place to a sticky, watery fluid, which gradually becomes thicker, like a syrup or jelly. This is slowly replaced by a new bone structure and forms a kind of cement to gold together the broken ends.” — Blaisedell, 1904
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Human Appendicular SkeletonSource
Albert F. Blaisedell Our bodies and How We Live (Boston: Ginn &, 1904) 38
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