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To: tutstar
How could Mikey (assuming it was Mikey) bust her femur? Kick her down the staircase at the bottom of which he "found" her?
386 posted on 11/22/2003 10:21:55 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck ("Across this great nation people pray -- do not put out her flame" -- DFU. An unashamed Godsquadder)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
I don't know, but I definitely wonder, only know that the bone scan shows injury to the bone.....

http://www.terrisfight.org/images/bonescan.jpg

387 posted on 11/22/2003 10:28:50 AM PST by tutstar
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To: HiTech RedNeck
At risk of fames....

Read the police report.... no visible injuries. No evidence of any crime committed at the scene.

Read the hospital summary.... no report of any visible injuries. Right knee was x-rayed during hospital stay due to fusion (unable to flex) bone normal, no fractures.

"An FDLE report released this week said that agents could not find sufficient evidence of a crime and said there was a lack of physical evidence. The agents said they could not justify a case against Michael Schiavo." http://www.wjxx.com/news/news-article.aspx?storyid=9426
10/18/2003

Dr's consulted re bone scan reported abnormalities due to osteoporosis "brittle bone disease".
392 posted on 11/22/2003 12:14:30 PM PST by daylate-dollarshort
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To: HiTech RedNeck
At risk of fames....

Read the police report.... no visible injuries. No evidence of any crime committed at the scene.

Read the hospital summary.... no report of any visible injuries. Right knee was x-rayed during hospital stay due to fusion (unable to flex) bone normal, no fractures.

"An FDLE report released this week said that agents could not find sufficient evidence of a crime and said there was a lack of physical evidence. The agents said they could not justify a case against Michael Schiavo." http://www.wjxx.com/news/news-article.aspx?storyid=9426
10/18/2003

Dr's consulted re bone scan reported abnormalities due to osteoporosis "brittle bone disease".
393 posted on 11/22/2003 12:14:32 PM PST by daylate-dollarshort
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To: HiTech RedNeck; tutstar
Your femur is your thighbone. It extends from your hip to your knee. A fracture is a crack or a break in a bone.

How does it occur?
Femur fractures, except for stress fractures, are caused by events that involve a lot of force. Because the femur is a very large bone it takes a lot of force to cause a fracture. Examples of accidents that might break the femur are falling from a height or having a high-speed collision, such as while skiing or snowmobiling.

What are the symptoms?
Symptoms of a femur fracture include:

severe pain
swelling and bruising
inability to walk
visible deformity at the site of fracture
the feeling that the bone in your thigh is moving.
When you break your femur, you may lose a lot of blood in the thigh. You may feel numbness, coldness, or tingling in your foot or lower leg if the blood supply to these areas is injured. If you lose a lot of blood, you may go into shock.

How is it treated?
Most femur fractures need to be fixed in surgery. Your leg may be placed in traction in the hospital before surgery is done.

Methods used to fix a femur fracture include surgery to insert:

steel screws
steel plates and steel screws
steel rods, which can be placed down the center of the shaft of the femur.
(Muscles are usually injured in a femur fracture, and your hip and knee commonly become stiff due to the injury and surgery.)
http://216.239.39.104/search?q=cache:MgtoCtg9vY4J:www.medformation.com/mf/crssma.nsf/sma/sma_femurfra_sma.htm+how+does+a+femur+break%3F&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
409 posted on 11/22/2003 4:39:07 PM PST by nicmarlo
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