Examples of severe injuries include the following:
Injuries that result in the loss of an arm, leg, eyesight, or hearing. Injuries that result in permanent damage to an organ or loss of function of an organ or significant limitation on the function of an organ.
Neck and Spinal Cord Injuries
Injuries to the spinal cord are one of the most commonly seen types of catastrophic injury. Car accidents, falls from heights and trampoline accidents can all cause severe and catastrophic injury to the neck and spinal cord. Neck and spinal cord injuries are often debilitating.
Flail Chest: Defined as at least two ribs broken in at least two places (each) this high force trauma injury occurs when a section of the rib-cage becomes broken away from the rest, and is able to move independently of the rest of the chest.
Rare injuries and conditions include eye injuries, dental injuries, neck and cervical injuries, and dehydration and heat illnesses.
Nerves typically take the longest, healing after 3-4 months. Cartilage takes about 12 weeks to heal. Ligaments take about 10-12 weeks to heal. Bones take about 6-8 weeks to heal on average.
The National Safety Council (NSC) says that the top three leading causes of work-related injuries are overexertion, bodily reaction and slips, trips, and falls. These account for a whopping 84 per cent of all nonfatal injuries at work, says the NSC.
A Serious Injury or Fatality (SIF) event is an incident or near miss that results in or has the potential to produce a fatal or life-altering injury or illness.
Types of Serious Injuries
The law defines a serious injury as an injury that results in any of the following: death. significant disfigurement. dismemberment.
A severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is damage to the brain caused by an injury that changes the way the brain normally works. Concussions are sometimes called mild TBIs, and most have a temporary effect on brain function. Severe TBIs usually have longer-lasting effects.
Accidents at Home
According to the NSC, 53.6 percent of all injury-involved accidents occur at home.
Grade 3: Tears are severe and indicate complete rupture of that muscle or ligament. This may actually be less painful then a grade 2 as the injured structure is no longer being stressed. This is a more serious injury and will often require surgery or immobilising in a plaster cast.
What Part of the Body Heals the Slowest? Ligaments, nerves and wounds in areas with more movement heal the slowest. Injuries to these areas have a longer recovery time because of poor blood circulation and constant motion stress.
A skin wound that doesn't heal, heals slowly or heals but tends to recur is known as a chronic wound. Some of the many causes of chronic (ongoing) skin wounds can include trauma, burns, skin cancers, infection or underlying medical conditions such as diabetes. Wounds that take a long time to heal need special care.
The tiniest injuries, doctors agree, can often cause maximum pain: ramming a pinky toe into a chair leg, pinching a finger in a door, twanging an elbow on a hard corner, or suffering, inch-for-inch, perhaps the most excruciating superficial trauma, the dreaded paper cut.
Some injuries can change a person's life, but are incredibly difficult to diagnose and treat. This is often the case when it comes to injuries such as whiplash, nerve damage, sprains, strains, mild traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) and concussions.
Trigeminal neuralgia
It is one of the most painful conditions known. It causes extreme, sporadic and sudden burning pain or electric shock sensation in the face, including the eyes, lips, scalp, nose, upper jaw, forehead, and lower jaw.
First it is important to understand the difference between being hurt and being injured. Being hurt means that though there is some discomfort, you are not going to make it worse with training. Being injured means that if you resume with your normal protocol, you will make the problem worse.
The most commonly injured organs are the spleen, liver, retroperitoneum, small bowel, kidneys (see the image below), bladder, colorectum, diaphragm, and pancreas. Men tend to be affected slightly more often than women. Blunt abdominal trauma. Right kidney injury with blood in perirenal space.