Osteoarthritis -- Chemotherapy -- Congresses. : Voltaren-new findings : [proceedings of an international symposium on Voltaren held in Paris on 22nd June 1981 during the 15th International Congress of Rheumatology] / edited by E. Kåss
Osteoarthritis -- metabolism : Osteoarthritis, Inflammation, and Degradation : a Continuum / edited by Joseph A. Buckwalter, Martin Lotz and Jean-François Stoltz
Noninflammatory degenerative disease of the hip joint which usually appears in late middle or old age. It is characterized by growth or maturational disturbances in the femoral neck and head, as well as acetabular dysplasia. A dominant symptom is pain on weight-bearing or motion
Noninflammatory degenerative disease of the hip joint which usually appears in late middle or old age. It is characterized by growth or maturational disturbances in the femoral neck and head, as well as acetabular dysplasia. A dominant symptom is pain on weight-bearing or motion
Noninflammatory degenerative disease of the knee joint consisting of three large categories: conditions that block normal synchronous movement, conditions that produce abnormal pathways of motion, and conditions that cause stress concentration resulting in changes to articular cartilage. (Crenshaw, Campbell's Operative Orthopaedics, 8th ed, p2019)
Noninflammatory degenerative disease of the knee joint consisting of three large categories: conditions that block normal synchronous movement, conditions that produce abnormal pathways of motion, and conditions that cause stress concentration resulting in changes to articular cartilage. (Crenshaw, Campbell's Operative Orthopaedics, 8th ed, p2019)
Osteoarthritis -- Surgery. : Biomechanics of the knee : with application to the pathogenesis and the surgical treatment of osteoarthritis / Paul G.J. Maquet
A progressive, degenerative joint disease, the most common form of arthritis, especially in older persons. The disease is thought to result not from the aging process but from biochemical changes and biomechanical stresses affecting articular cartilage. In the foreign literature it is often called osteoarthrosis deformans
A progressive, degenerative joint disease, the most common form of arthritis, especially in older persons. The disease is thought to result not from the aging process but from biochemical changes and biomechanical stresses affecting articular cartilage. In the foreign literature it is often called osteoarthrosis deformans
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Osteoartritis. : Osteoarthritis : diagnosis and medical/surgical management / Roland W. Moskowitz [and others]
A large multinuclear cell associated with the BONE RESORPTION. An odontoclast, also called cementoclast, is cytomorphologically the same as an osteoclast and is involved in CEMENTUM resorption
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Osteoblasts : The growth plate / edited by Irving M. Shapiro, Barbara Boyan, H. Clarke Anderson
Osteochondritis Dissecans -- surgery : Pediatric and adolescent knee surgery / editors, Frank A. Cordasco, MD, MS, Co-Medical Director, Leon Root Motion Analysis Laboratory, Attending Orthopedic Surgeon, Sports Medicine and Shoulder Service, Hospital for Special Surgery, Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York, Daniel W. Green, MD, MS, FAAP, FACS, Attending Orthopedic Surgeon, Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery Service, Hospital for Special Surgery, Professor of Clinical Orthopaedic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York
Any of a group of bone disorders involving one or more ossification centers (EPIPHYSES). It is characterized by degeneration or NECROSIS followed by revascularization and reossification. Osteochondrosis often occurs in children causing varying degrees of discomfort or pain. There are many eponymic types for specific affected areas, such as tarsal navicular (Kohler disease) and tibial tuberosity (Osgood-Schlatter disease)