Results 241 to 250 of about 34,011 (292)
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Chondrosarcoma of the Axial Skeleton
2021Chondrosarcomas are rare primary bone malignancies that produce cartilage matrix, most commonly found in the appendicular skeleton. Less than 10% of cases occur in the axial skeleton with the majority found in the spinal column. Conventional chondrosarcoma comprises the overwhelming majority of axial chondrosarcoma.
Akash A. Shah +3 more
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Bone Densitometry of the Axial Skeleton
Orthopedic Clinics of North America, 1990The role of bone densitometry used as a diagnostic tool is discussed as well as its role in monitoring both the disease process itself and therapy. The QCT method and the DPA/DEXA method are discussed separately, including their regions of interest, calibration, radiation dose, diagnostic sensitivity, precision, and the monitoring and accuracy of ...
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Overview of Axial Skeleton Injuries
Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 2012Axial skeletal injury and related illness is a major cause of medical disability and force attrition in deployed service members. Predeployment identification of at-risk personnel is unreliable. Risk of axial skeletal injury or illness during deployment is heterogeneous.
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[Osteoporotic fractures of axial skeleton].
Praxis, 2012Osteoporotic fractures most frequently first occur in the axial skeleton, especially in the vertebral bodies of the thoracolumbar transition. Beside pain, these fractures cause increasing kyphosis leading to changes in statics and a shift of the bodies' center of gravity.
M J, Scheyerer +3 more
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2009
Diagnostic imaging of spinal trauma has been revolutionized as findings obscured in the shadows of radiography have been brought to light by computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). CT illuminates much that was previously unseen and still more that was unsuspected.
Victor N. Cassar-Pullicino +1 more
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Diagnostic imaging of spinal trauma has been revolutionized as findings obscured in the shadows of radiography have been brought to light by computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). CT illuminates much that was previously unseen and still more that was unsuspected.
Victor N. Cassar-Pullicino +1 more
openaire +1 more source
Angiography of the Axial Skeleton
1989Angiography of the spine has a small but often critical place in the evaluation of some spinal lesions. Clinical angiography of the axial spine can be divided into two different types: arteriography of the spinal cord and venography of the epidural venous plexus. Arteriography is generally used to evaluate the small, select group of patients with known
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