Results 291 to 300 of about 11,174,931 (323)
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Diseases of the Bones and Joints

Annual Review of Medicine, 1955
Any discussion of rheumatoid arthritis always brings up for consideration cortisone and its derivatives. After nearly six years of experience the drug is recognized as a substance with effective therapeutic activities as well as a potent agent for control of pain.
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Degenerative Joint Disease

Clinics in Rheumatic Diseases, 1983
We have focused on several features somewhat unique to OA which require special attention relative to clinical trials. These include disease classification, for which the schema in Table 1 was developed, patient selection and admission criteria, and the choice of appropriate clinical outcome parameters.
Marc C. Hochberg, Roy D. Altman
openaire   +3 more sources

Obesity and Joint Disease

Gerontology, 1976
In male mice of strain C57Bl, obesity caused by intraperitoneal administration of aurothioglucose failed to alter the course of spontaneous osteoarthrosis. The distribution of osteoarthrosis of the knee joint and of spondylosis of the thoracic and lumbar spine was haphazard in regard to body weight, and levels of plasma and hepatic lipids.
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NUTRITION AND JOINT DISEASE

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1958
Few conditions have the wealth of medical folklore and the number of unconfirmed theories that are encountered in the field of rheumatic diseases. High on the list is the belief that in some way diet has something to do with the causation of many forms of arthritis or may be important in the cure of these conditions.
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The Archaeology of Joint Disease

1999
Not all diseases leave their mark on the bones. The major killers of the past, such as the infectious diseases of childhood, gastroenteritis, pneumonia and septicaemia from infected wounds, as well as cardiovascular and neurological conditions, in general leave no trace.
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The Nature of Joints and Joint Diseases

1991
Joints exist to enable bones to move relative to one another. In the simplest joints, which permit only limited movement, the bone ends are separated by a band of fibrous tissue which tethers the bone ends together and yet gives a degree of flexibility (Fig. 1.1). As the functional needs of joints become more complex, so the nature of the joint changes.
A. J. Freemont, J. Denton
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Joint Diseases

MRI of the Temporomandibular Joint, 2020
T. Robba   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Temporomandibular joint disease

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1949
Roger G. Gerry, Herbert A. Markowitz
openaire   +4 more sources

Diseases of Bone and Joints

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1970
To produce a "concise, yet informative, comprehensive survey" of skeletal disease—the author's avowed objective—indeed presents a formidable venture. To correlate pathology with clinical manifestations, roentgenograms, and treatment greatly increases the magnitude of the task.
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Degenerative Joint Diseases and Neuroinflammation

Pain Practice, 2017
M. Fusco   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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