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Catastrophic Femoral Head-Stem Trunnion Dissociation Secondary to Corrosion. [PDF]
BACKGROUND: Modular femoral heads provide procedural enhancement by allowing accurate restoration of hip offset and limb-length equalization. However, corrosion may lead to adverse local tissue reactions.
Laura J Matsen Ko +4 more
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Osteonecrosis of the Femoral Head
Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 1999New cases of osteonecrosis of the femoral head in the United States number between 10,000 and 20,000 per year. This disease usually affects patients in their late 30s and early 40s. Although a number of authors have related specific risk factors to this disease, its etiology, pathogenesis, and treatment remain a source of considerable controversy. This
Rafael J. Sierra +2 more
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Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 2007
Fracture of the femoral head is a severe, relatively uncommon injury; typically, it occurs following traumatic posterior dislocation of the hip joint. The Pipkin classification is the most commonly used classification system. Diagnosis is aided by a complete history, physical examination, and imaging, including computed tomography.
Henry M Broekhuyse +2 more
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Fracture of the femoral head is a severe, relatively uncommon injury; typically, it occurs following traumatic posterior dislocation of the hip joint. The Pipkin classification is the most commonly used classification system. Diagnosis is aided by a complete history, physical examination, and imaging, including computed tomography.
Henry M Broekhuyse +2 more
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JBJS Reviews, 2015
Femoral head fractures are consequential but uncommon injuries. Because of their relatively rare occurrence, large series with validated outcomes have not been published, to our knowledge. However, the available literature provides important insights into the treatment of these challenging fractures.
Milton L Routt +2 more
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Femoral head fractures are consequential but uncommon injuries. Because of their relatively rare occurrence, large series with validated outcomes have not been published, to our knowledge. However, the available literature provides important insights into the treatment of these challenging fractures.
Milton L Routt +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
The sphericity of the femoral head
Medical & Biological Engineering, 1967Ten femoral heads, three of them grossly pathological, have been examined to determine their shape, employing seven types of testing. We found the sagittal section of the normal femoral head to be remarkably circular, with very close concentricity of the surface of the articular cartilage and the underlying bone.
John Charnley, B. T. Hammond
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Skeletal Radiology, 1987
A notch-like defect at the vertex of the proximal femoral ossification center is a normal variant in children. This has often been mistaken for Legg-Perthes disease. This sharply defined defect is distinct from the irregular epiphyseal ossification patterns common in other areas.
F. M. H. Ziter +3 more
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A notch-like defect at the vertex of the proximal femoral ossification center is a normal variant in children. This has often been mistaken for Legg-Perthes disease. This sharply defined defect is distinct from the irregular epiphyseal ossification patterns common in other areas.
F. M. H. Ziter +3 more
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Osteonecrosis of the Femoral Head: Femoral Head Sparing Treatments
Seminars in Arthroplasty, 2010Osteonecrosis is a debilitating disease that affects patients with a varying degree of severity. Treatment for severe progression of the disease often includes total hip arthroplasty or resurfacing procedures. In a younger patient population, the preservation of the femoral head is desirable in cases where the integrity of the femoral head can be ...
Aaron J. Johnson +2 more
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Hemodynamics of the femoral head.
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 1981We have determined the pressure-flow relationships of the canine femoral head during venous tamponade of the hip capsule. Intra-osseous pressures were determined before and after infusion of the joint with saline solution to a pressure of sixty-five centimeters of water.
L H Jones +2 more
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Destructive Arthropathy of the Femoral Head
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 2021Abstract Objectives Destructive arthropathy of the hip refers to noninfectious arthropathy causing extensive femoral head bone destruction. It has been described in the surgical literature using a variety of diagnostic criteria, but it remains a poorly defined entity.
Julia R. Crim, Lester J. Layfield
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Fractures of the Femoral Head [PDF]
Fractures of the femoral head are not frequent and are almost always combined with dislocation of the hip. We reviewed 43 cases of femoral head fractures (33 men, 10 women), mean age 38.6 years. Using Pipkin's classification there were 13 type 1 cases, 5 type 2 and 25 type 4.
Leo Massari +5 more
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