Hello! I have multiple questions on this one scenario, I hope that's all right :)
Setting: I am writing a piece set in the "dark ages" around the time of Geoffrey of Monmouth and Arthurian legends. In the fandom canon knowledge and treatment of diseases and injuries is more advanced than it actually was at the time. For example there is knowledge of
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If you're talking about a closed compound fracture he'd lose no blood. Open compound fracture it depends on if he'd hit arteries or the like, its up to you. If the skin is broken, then yes, he is susceptible to infection, if its not, then he's susceptible to internal bleeding more than anything, but infection was very very serious in those days. A killer. If he's concious, he would be walking back, not staying there, as put simply...there's no point in staying there. 1-2 miles is peanuts at that time, its peanuts now. I assume there is nothing wrong with his legs?
For the record, my brother had a compound fracture in junior school and the school thought he was playing it up...he walked around with it all day and did most normal school type activities, though with some trouble. He was 7-8 at the time.
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wouldn't be the first time i'm wrong, mind you.
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and as an afterthought:
I'm also unsure he HIMSELF would go fetch the horses instead of letting a stablehand do that, unless it was some covert operation bit.
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when I was researching suturing I came upon Military Medicine in the Middle Ages and they do also say something on fractures, however I assume this is high middle ages rather than the timeframe you are looking for ( ... )
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And I agree that there is a lot of wiggle room when using the series - but if the OP really is thinking in terms of Geoffrey of Monmouth, they're stuck with something very close to real life middle ages.
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About the fainting thing, at first I was going to have him suffer a compound fracture where he was losing blood and the pain was perhaps a lot more than a closed fracture, which is why he fainted (though even in that situation 3-4 hours seems like pushing it xD). He didn't sustain any injury apart from his arm.
Anyways thanks again for all your help that was really useful :) I'm glad you recovered well!
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In my case it took about 2 weeks longer to heal than it was supposed to, 8 rather than 6, I think precisely because there was no plaster or anything keeping it from jiggling about. And I was nine and was not that careful with it - almost deliberately careLESS because I resented it so much, though I still remember being devastated and hating the doctor when I thought I was only a fortnight away from being able to take the sling off and they told me it would be another month.
I don't know what difference serious wonkiness would make - if I have any it's very slight. You can't see anything. As I say I suppose if there had ever been any sign there was going to be a real problem, they would have done something about it - but my experience does show that it CAN heal fine without anything much being done. Aside from a vague and possibly untrustworthy memory of an x-ray, the only thing that makes me even suspect it's not quite right is - well, you know this yoga position? Bending my left arm up behind my back, I can do ( ... )
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Anyway thanks 100 times for the detail! That was so useful and helpful and gah xD Have a nice day!
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