Results 301 to 310 of about 2,090,287 (327)
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The Diabetic Foot

Angiology, 1976
Diabetic foot problems are common and result in multiple and prolonged hospitalizations, which often lead to amputation. While peripheral vascular dis ease and neuropathy are not totally preventable with current forms of therapy, many of the foot lesions resulting from these complications can be prevented by patient education and prophylactic foot ...
openaire   +5 more sources

Polydactyly of the foot

Der Orthopäde, 1999
Polydactyly may be preaxial or tibial (halluxside), postaxial or ulnar (side of the little toe) and central (middle toes). The duplication may appear at the distal and medial phalanges or at the whole digit. The metatarsal bone may be partwise or completely duplicated, the accessory toes may share only one metatarsal.
F. Grill, B. Bader, Erica Lamprecht
openaire   +4 more sources

Charcot Foot

Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association, 1989
Successful management of the Charcot foot is one of the most challenging undertakings faced by physicians. However, many times such patients undergo prolonged and attentive care only to develop further deformity, and in many cases succumb to amputation.
E. Dalton McGlamry, Alan S Banks
openaire   +4 more sources

The foot microbiome

Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology, 2020
AbstractBackgroundThe human skin microbiome is represented by bacteria, fungi, viruses, and mites.AimsEvery human being possess their own unique skin microbiome because intrinsic and environmental factors have a significant impact on the quality and quantity of microorganism. Every site of the body is a separate microbial niche.PatientsThe feet are one
Katarzyna Adamczyk   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Athlete's foot.

BMJ clinical evidence, 2005
Around 15% to 25% of people are likely to have athlete's foot at any one time. The infection can spread to other parts of the body and to other people.We conducted a systematic review and aimed to answer the following clinical question: What are the effects of topical treatments for athlete's foot?
openaire   +7 more sources

One Foot in, One Foot out

NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy, 2008
As radical health professionals, we have the triple identity of workers, of activists, and of intellectuals that creates the cauldron in which we live contradictory lives. We share the concerns of other workers for salaries, job security, health and safety at work, and work load.
Mary Lee Dunn, Richard Levins
openaire   +3 more sources

Foot Pressure Abnormalities in the Diabetic Foot

2002
For decades, foot pressure measurements have been used to evaluate many medical conditions. Early techniques to assess plantar foot pressure were simple, yet innovative, methods that provided investigators with semiquantitative data. The introduction of the optical pedobarograph significantly improved the accuracy of foot pressure measurements ...
Aristidis Veves   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Foot

2006
article on the metrical ...
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Trench Foot and Immersion Foot

New England Journal of Medicine, 1945
FROSTBITE and kindred injuries to the feet from cold have been recorded as a source of casualties in military campaigns since the epic retreat of the Greeks under Xenophon across the snow-covered mountains of Armenia. Cold does not necessarily produce a single type of injury, as many have supposed, but may result in several distinct syndromes, which ...
William B. Captain Scoville   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Skew Foot/Serpentine Foot

2021
The pathological anatomy of skew foot at the tarsometatarsal region, radiologic aspects, spontaneous course of the deformity, and indication for conservative or surgical treatment are discussed in detail. For preschool- and school-age combined osteotomies of the medial cuneiform bone and the proximal metatarsal region of the second to fifth ray proved ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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