Results 191 to 200 of about 7,350 (241)
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Congenital Malformation of Incus

A.M.A. Archives of Otolaryngology, 1958
Malformation of one ossicle in an ear which otherwise appears to have developed normally is extremely rare. Most of the reported cases with deformed ossicles are those of congenital atresia of the ear, where the ossicular abnormality is accompanied by atresia of the canal and other deformities of the middle and inner ear. In this type of case fusion of
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The Incus, Normal and Pathological

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1966
RECENTLY in tympanoplasty the incus has been transposed from its natural position in the middle ear and used to repair the defect in the conductive mechanism. This ossicle is interposed between the handle of the malleus and the head or footplate of the stapes.
R J, Bellucci, D, Wolff
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Remodelling of the normal incus

Clinical Otolaryngology & Allied Sciences, 2007
Thirty normal incudes were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to assess the pattern and degree of bony remodelling. The body and short process appeared stable throughout life. By contrast, the lenticular and long processes demonstrated marked osteoclastic activity with a tendency to undergo progressive erosion with advancing age.
F J, Lannigan, P, O'Higgins, P, McPhie
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Incus Homograft Viability in Cats

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1967
THE USE of the homograft incus in middle ear reconstructive procedures is presently undergoing widespread consideration. 1-8 Replacing a diseased incus with a normal incus offers the advantages of natural size and shape and ease of procurement as compared with construction of a cortical bone, or an artificial substitute.
L E, Winter, A, Hohmann
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Fundamental aspects of incus transplantation

The Laryngoscope, 1972
AbstractIn the present study, the results of experimental incus transplantations performed in a large number of rats are reported. The behavior of fresh autologous and homologous incudes and of incus grafts denatured by boiling or by preservation in alcohol, were studied up to survival times of more than two years.
W, Kuijpers, P, Broek
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Incus and Stapes Footplate Simulator

The Laryngoscope, 1997
AbstractProsthesis placement in stapes surgery is difficult to master. Although temporal bone dissection is an important adjunct to operative experience and anatomic knowledge when training residents to perform this procedure, the high cost and scarcity of temporal bones available for teaching purposes limit their convenience as teaching tools ...
S B, Mathews   +2 more
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Incus Replacement Grafts in Monkeys

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1969
MANY materials have been used successfully for the reconstruction of the middle ear. Ossicular remnants are the most widely used material for this purpose. These autografts are well tolerated and even retain some viability. 1 When no remnants are available, other types of grafts have been incorporated with varying degrees of success.
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Experimental Incus Transposition

Archives of Otolaryngology, 1964
T A, STENGL, A, HOHMANN
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Mesoleptobasis incus Sjostedt 1918

2009
Published as part of Garrison, Rosser W. & Ellenrieder, Natalia Von, 2009, Redefinition of Mesoleptobasis Sjöstedt 1918 with the inclusion of Metaleptobasis cyanolineata (Wasscher 1998) comb. nov. and description of a new species, Mesoleptobasis elongata (Odonata: Coenagrionidae), pp.
Garrison, Rosser W.   +1 more
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Malleus-Incus Complex

1978
Except for the cyclostomes (hagfishes and lampreys), all vertebrates have jaws. Upper and lower jaw are connected via the quadrate bone and the articular bone, a condition common to all groups but the mammals. This primary articulation is replaced in mammals by the secondary articulation, which is formed by the squamosal and the dentary.
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