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Management of Solitary Osteochondroma Arising from Mammillary Process of D12 Vertebra in an 11-Year-Old Female: A Rare Case Report and Literature Review. [PDF]
Kumar R +4 more
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Poking Pluripotency: Nanoinjection Into Human iPSCs. [PDF]
Harberts J +5 more
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Gradient Electronic Landscapes in van der Waals Heterostructures. [PDF]
Lassaline N +10 more
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Repeatability of Corneal Astigmatism and Equivalent Power with the MS-39 Tomographer Derived from Model Surface Fitting in a Cataractous Population. [PDF]
Langenbucher A +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
Science of the burp: understanding aerophagia and eructation in newborns. [PDF]
James V, Savargaonkar R.
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Consumed by Abdominal Distention
Arthritis Care &Research, EarlyView.
Abimbola Fadairo‐Azinge +3 more
wiley +1 more source
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Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, 2005
The purpose of this study was to compare the radiographic results of 2 different glenoid component designs. This series consisted of 66 shoulder arthroplasties with primary osteoarthritis divided into 2 groups based on glenoid component type. One group comprised shoulders receiving cemented flat-back polyethylene glenoid implants.
Szabo, I. +5 more
openaire +5 more sources
The purpose of this study was to compare the radiographic results of 2 different glenoid component designs. This series consisted of 66 shoulder arthroplasties with primary osteoarthritis divided into 2 groups based on glenoid component type. One group comprised shoulders receiving cemented flat-back polyethylene glenoid implants.
Szabo, I. +5 more
openaire +5 more sources
2018
Flat back syndrome is a phenomenon that occurs when the patient has loss of lumbar lordosis, which can lead to pelvic incidence (PI) and lumbar lordosis (LL) mismatch. Patients can develop this syndrome after a prior lumbar fusion or develop loss of LL secondary to degenerative changes in the spine.
Yusef I. Mosley, James S. Harrop
openaire +1 more source
Flat back syndrome is a phenomenon that occurs when the patient has loss of lumbar lordosis, which can lead to pelvic incidence (PI) and lumbar lordosis (LL) mismatch. Patients can develop this syndrome after a prior lumbar fusion or develop loss of LL secondary to degenerative changes in the spine.
Yusef I. Mosley, James S. Harrop
openaire +1 more source

