Results 211 to 220 of about 23,475 (245)
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Orthopedics, 1996
ABSTRACT Heterotopic ossification is a well-recognized condition frequently encountered by the orthopedic surgeon. Although typically asymptomatic, heterotopic ossification can be a complication of extreme severity. This article is a review of literature and attempts to clarify the definition, and delineates the etiology, incidence, risk ...
F F, Naraghi +4 more
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ABSTRACT Heterotopic ossification is a well-recognized condition frequently encountered by the orthopedic surgeon. Although typically asymptomatic, heterotopic ossification can be a complication of extreme severity. This article is a review of literature and attempts to clarify the definition, and delineates the etiology, incidence, risk ...
F F, Naraghi +4 more
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 2004
Heterotopic ossification, the formation of bone in soft tissue, requires inductive signaling pathways, inducible osteoprogenitor cells, and a heterotopic environment conducive to osteogenesis. Little is known about the molecular pathogenesis of this condition.
Frederick S, Kaplan +3 more
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Heterotopic ossification, the formation of bone in soft tissue, requires inductive signaling pathways, inducible osteoprogenitor cells, and a heterotopic environment conducive to osteogenesis. Little is known about the molecular pathogenesis of this condition.
Frederick S, Kaplan +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Heterotopic Ossification Revisited
Orthopedics, 2011Heterotopic ossification is the abnormal formation of mature lamellar bone within extraskeletal soft tissues where bone does not exist. Heterotopic ossification has been classified into posttraumatic, nontraumatic or neurogenic, and myositis ossificans progressiva or fibrodysplasia ossificans progressive. The pathophysiology is unknown.
Andreas F, Mavrogenis +2 more
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Southern Medical Journal, 1990
Heterotopic ossification is becoming increasingly recognized as a phenomenon that can complicate trauma to the head and spinal cord. It can be a disabling accompaniment of thermal injury, and it may seriously compromise results in hip arthroplasty and the treatment of acetabular fractures.
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Heterotopic ossification is becoming increasingly recognized as a phenomenon that can complicate trauma to the head and spinal cord. It can be a disabling accompaniment of thermal injury, and it may seriously compromise results in hip arthroplasty and the treatment of acetabular fractures.
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Neurogenic Heterotopic Ossification
NeuroRehabilitation, 1993Heterotopic ossification (HO) following neurological injury is defined as soft tissue bone formation which is most often seen after spinal cord or head injury and reported to occur after numerous other neurological insults. It can result in ankylosis of associated joints restricting patient mobility.
S M, Paul, J R, Barlow
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Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1975
Heterotopic ossification occurs in 20 to 25 per cent of all traumatic spinal cord injured patients; it is sufficiently extensive in about 1/3 of the affected group to limit the range of motion of paralyzed joints. When necessary, resection of heterotopic deposits may be successfully accomplished in those patients in which the deposits consist of mature
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Heterotopic ossification occurs in 20 to 25 per cent of all traumatic spinal cord injured patients; it is sufficiently extensive in about 1/3 of the affected group to limit the range of motion of paralyzed joints. When necessary, resection of heterotopic deposits may be successfully accomplished in those patients in which the deposits consist of mature
openaire +2 more sources

