IMAJ | volume 26
Journal 9, October 2024
pages: 537-539
1 School of Humanities, University of New England, Armidale, and University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia
2 Castlereagh Imaging Edgecliff, Sydney, Australia
Summary
In the last hundred years, the science of fracture repair has significantly changed. Management has moved from a simple metabolic and hormonal concept of bone regeneration to an inflammatory concept and now to a more complicated immunological description. Fracture repair has been considered age-dependent and related to diabetes, nutrition, hormone connection, autoimmune diseases, rheumatic arthritis, and nicotine. Recently a new branch of medicine, osteoimmunology, which deals with the mechanism of fracture repair, has been introduced.