Results 221 to 230 of about 40,111 (360)
Studies on the femur : 3. the effects of maceration and drying in the white and negro [PDF]
Ingalls, N. William
core
Textbook Outcomes in Medial Femoral Condyle/Trochlea Free Flap Reconstruction for Scaphoid Nonunion
American Medical Association 2025 +1 more
openalex +1 more source
Workflow from CT to PCA‐based shape modeling of the proximal femoral canal (n = 763). Feature maps (size, roundness, torsion, flare, curvature) reveal sex‐ and age‐dependent patterns; three PCs capture ≈68% of variance and summarize dominant anatomical changes. Insights inform implant sizing and design envelopes in cementless THA.
Stefan Bracher +3 more
wiley +1 more source
A three‐dimensional biomechanical model of the musculoskeletal system is used to analyse the potential locomotor functions of the small (~1 kg) Late Triassic archosaurian reptile Gracilisuchus stipanicicorum. The study finds that, potentially like the ancestral archosaur, this taxon was probably quadrupedal, plantigrade and neither strongly sprawling ...
Agustina Lecuona +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Avascular necrosis of lateral femoral condyle in a middle-aged woman from central India. [PDF]
Gulghane A +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Loss of lateral femoral condyle following sepsis of knee region in infancy: The hypothesis of vascular pathogenesis and clinical course [PDF]
Anil Agarwal, Ravi Jethwa
openalex +1 more source
Aging of bone density (BV/TV) is regional: Forelimb [left] elements gain bone sporadically (orange) but hind limb elements [right] lose bone globally (blue). Abstract Globally, human population structure is quickly trending older, increasing the prevalence and systemic burden of age‐related skeletal disorders such as osteoporosis.
Cassandra M. Turcotte +16 more
wiley +1 more source
The Anterior Cartilage Edge of the Lateral Femoral Condyle Medial Wall is a Useful Landmark to Avoid Tunnel Convergence in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction With Lateral Extra-Articular Tenodesis. [PDF]
Wang HD +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
Architecture of lower leg muscles in children: Reference curves and potential mechanisms of growth
Muscle architecture (physiological cross‐sectional area, fascicle lengths and pennation angle) was measured from multimodal MRI scans of the lower legs of 197 children aged ≤15 years. We showed that lower leg muscle volumes (product of PCSA and fascicle length) increase primarily through increases in PCSA (transverse growth) rather than increases in ...
Brian V. Y. Chow +12 more
wiley +1 more source

