a sprain or a dislocation, in general
bandages and dressings consist in the winding part of the body tissues and bandages to protect wounds from infection, to absorb the secretions, of course, stop the bleeding or to block dislocations, sprains and fractures.
The bandages are made with strips of varying width depending on the area of \u200b\u200bthe body that may be affected.
Bandage limbs. To bind a portion of a limb using a spiral bandage. After two turns of bandage, wrap the part you keep climbing, for each round, about 1 / 3 of the width of the bandage, andandodall'alto down. At the end, you do two more laps and fermail all with a patch or a pin.
The bandages should never be too narrow, impeding blood circulation, but not too wide of course because they lose their effectiveness.
If the bandage includes a joint, elbow or knee, you can continue to climb to immobilize the hand, or when you get in the groove of the joint is screwed up the patch itself to allow joint mobility.
In a hand bandage (Arm), one starts from the wrist, you go down to cover the palm and fingers, at an angle, leaving the thumb and climb back toward the wrist where it then goes to fix. Also for the ankle (leg) will proceed in the same way.
tipogia This wrapping is also suitable for the chest and abdomen.
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