Results 291 to 300 of about 2,383,550 (356)
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VASCULARIZED BONE GRAFTS

Orthopedics, 1994
ABSTRACT Free vascularized bone grafts allow living bone tissue to be transplanted to replace a bone defect. The use of vascularized bone grafts requires microvascular dissection and attachment to a recipient site artery and vein, whereas rotational or pedicle grafts are moved, while still attached to their blood supply, to a new site ...
M A, Pirela-Cruz, T A, DeCoster
openaire   +2 more sources

Autogenous bone grafting

The Journal of Foot and Ankle Surgery, 1996
Complex, out-of-the-ordinary problems are often encountered when evaluating patients for reconstructive foot and ankle surgery. Salvage of these complex problems in the foot and ankle often requires the use of autogenous bone grafts. This article provides a brief overview of autografts including indications, healing, graft types, and perioperative ...
M H, Hofbauer   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

BONE-GRAFTING AND BONE-GRAFT SUBSTITUTES

The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American Volume, 2002
The treatment of delayed unions, malunions, and nonunions requires restoration of alignment, stable fixation, and in many cases adjunctive measures such as bone-grafting or use of bone-graft substitutes.Bone-graft materials usually have one or more components: an osteoconductive matrix, which ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Biosynthetic Bone Grafting

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1999
The regeneration of bone remains an elusive yet important goal in the field of orthopaedic surgery. Despite its limitations, autogenous cancellous bone grafting continues to the most effective means by which bone healing is enhanced clinically. Biosynthetic bone grafts currently are being developed as an alternative to autogenous bone grafting.
J M, Lane, E, Tomin, M P, Bostrom
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Bone Repair Techniques, Bone Graft, and Bone Graft Substitutes

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1999
This paper reviews the techniques and materials (bone graft and bone graft substitutes) that currently are used to treat nonunions and bone defects. The techniques reviewed are intramedullary nailing, plating, distraction osteogenesis, and electric stimulation.
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Impaction bone grafting

Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica, 2001
Item does not contain ...
B. Willem Schreurs   +2 more
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Bone Graft Materials

Dental Clinics of North America, 2007
This article examines each class of bone grafting material based on some of the studies in each of the following categories: safety, animal research, periodontal and maxillofacial applications, skeletal grafting, and attempts to qualify the efficacy of each class of material.
openaire   +2 more sources

Bone graft substitutes

Expert Review of Medical Devices, 2006
The current gold standard of bone grafts is the autograft since it possesses all the characteristics necessary for new bone growth, namely osteoconductivity, osteogenicity and osteoinductivity. However, the autograft has its limitations, including donor-site morbidity and supply limitations, hindering this as an option for bone repair.
Cato, Laurencin   +2 more
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Alveolar Bone Grafting

2012
In the 1970s, Boyne and Sands published reports on a new technique for alveolar bone grafting. They recommended that only cancellous bone be used and that the procedure be undertaken in the mixed dentition prior to canine eruption. Alveolar bone grafting prior to canine eruption soon became a routine part of the protocol for 90% of European and North ...
openaire   +4 more sources

Bone-graft substitutes

The Lancet, 1999
Bone is the most commonly transplanted tissue except for blood. An autogenous bone graft was first used successfully in 1875 when Nussbaum harvested the ulna for bone to correct a skeletal defect? Today, in the U S A alone, autogenous bone grafting is done in about 200 000 surgical cases annually.
A, Van Heest, M, Swiontkowski
openaire   +2 more sources

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