Can you damage your pubic bone?

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asked Oct 28, 2024 in Other- Health by AllisonMorgan (1,140 points)
Can you damage your pubic bone?

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answered Oct 28, 2024 by kenmorgan316 (2,700 points)
You can damage your pubic bone and break one or more pubic bones.

Some ways you can damage or break your pubic bones are through car accidents, falling from a great height or injuries sustained in athletic sports like soccer.

A mild fracture to the pubic bone may heal in several weeks although serious pubic bone fractures can be life threatening and can involve damage to the organs that the pelvis protects.

The area over the pubic bone is called the suprapubic region and your pubic bone is the lower limit of the suprapubic region.

Your mons pubis is a rounded mass of fatty tissue which sits on top of your pubic bones and is also known as the pubic mound or mons Venus.

The mons pubis cushions your pubic bones during sex and also releases pheromones which can attract sexual partners and is part of your external genitalia in those assigned female at birth.

The organ that is directly behind the pubic bone is the bladder.

Your bladder is located in the front of your pelvis and behind the pubic symphysis.

Your pelvis is a basin shaped structure which contains your urinary bladder, rectum and also part of your descending colon.

In a female the pelvis also contains the ovaries, fallopian tubes and the uterus.

The pelvis is also located below your abdominal cavity and connects the trunk and legs.

And your pelvic floor muscles which include your levator ani, wrap around your pelvis.

Your pubic bones are the most forward facing bones of your pelvis and also includes the ilium and ischium.

There are two pubic bones and they are joined by cartilage at the pubic symphysis in the front of the pelvis.

The pubic bones are the two bones which form the front of your pelvis and are part of your hip bone.

Your pubic bones are the most forward facing bones of your hip bone and are made up of 3 bones which are the pubis bone, ilium bone and the ischium bone.

Each of the pubic bones are made up of 3 parts which are the body, the superior ramus and the inferior ramus.

Your pubic bones also meet in the front to form the pubic symphysis.

The superior ramus helps to form the acetabulum and is ridged by an upper pectineal line and a lower obturator crest.

Your inferior ramus of your pubis fuses with your inferior ramus of the ischium.

The pubic bone is one of the three main bones that make up the pelvis, a structure located between the abdomen and thighs.

The human pelvis is a bony ring formed by two bilateral innominate bones, made from the ilium, ischium, and pubis, and the sacrum.

The innominates articulate with each other anteriorly at the pubic symphysis and posteriorly with the sacrum at the sacroiliac joints.

The organs that are located just above your pelvic bone include the reproductive organs, urinary bladder, distal ureters, proximal urethra, terminal sigmoid colon, rectum, and anal canal.

The bones of your pelvis are located within the pelvic cavity.

The groin is the area in the body where the upper thighs meet the lowest part of the abdomen.

Normally, the abdomen and groin are kept separate by a wall of muscle and tissue.

The only openings in the wall are small tunnels called the inguinal and femoral canals.

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