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re: SEC Teams Need to Stop Scheduling West Virginia

Posted on 9/26/11 at 1:09 am to
Posted by McChowder
Hammond
Member since Dec 2006
5283 posts
Posted on 9/26/11 at 1:09 am to
quote:

McChowder throws around several; frontal, orbital, nasal related, but as you mentioned, this could be one in the same.

Broken nose and broken orbital lobe are two separate injuries. The broken orbital lobe requires surgery according to the post (the nose did not) and neither is something easily missed on visial inspection either. You are right, the skull fracture isnt something you would have been able to see.............but the other injuries? Come on man. The guy would have had severe blunt force trauma to the head to incur any of those and they would not have gone unnoticed.

If your loved one was in a car accident, would you be ok if the EMT sent you to a unit 75 miles away if your wife had obvious head trauma like that?
Posted by CrimsonTideMD
Member since Dec 2010
6925 posts
Posted on 9/26/11 at 1:16 am to
Wikipedia "nasal bones" and take a look at the diagram. You'll notice they're seated between the eyes and directly adjacent to the frontal bone. One good haymaker breaks all of them. It can look like nothing more than a shiner and a busted nose.
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