Results 241 to 250 of about 176,245 (290)
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Endometrial Ossification

Asia-Oceania Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1985
AbstractIrregular growth of bone was seen in the endometrial tissue after h‐sterectom‐ from a fortear old woman, four ‐ears after a therapeutic abortion. Implantation of fetal remnants into the uterine wall at the time of instrumentation has been considered as a source of heterotopic tissue.
M, Purwar, A, Deshpande, L S, Jain
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Heterotopic Ossification

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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The Relationship Between Dural Ossification and Spinal Stenosis in Thoracic Ossification of the Ligamentum Flavum

Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. American volume, 2019
Background: Dural ossification represents a difficult problem in the surgical management of thoracic ossification of the ligamentum flavum. Few studies have focused on this condition because of the relatively low prevalence.
Lingjia Yu   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Dendriforn Pulmonary Ossification

Pathology - Research and Practice, 1980
Four cases of dendriform pulmonary ossification are reported from postmortem roentgenography of isolated lungs. All showed pathoanatomical evidence of chronic fibrosing, mostly interstitial, rarely intraalveolar pneumonia, besides the typical manifestations of dendriform pulmonary ossification.
K M, Müller, J, Friemann, E, Stichnoth
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Heterotopic Ossification

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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ENDOMETRIAL OSSIFICATION

BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 1975
SummaryIrregular growth of bone was seen in endometrial tissue curetted from a 41‐year‐old woman, 12 months after an abortion. Bone was present in a second specimen taken later. On hysterectomy 22 months after the abortion, no trace of the abnormal tissue was found.
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Human penile ossification

Urology, 1982
Abstract True human penile ossification is rare. We report such a case with roentgenologic evidence and histologic confirmation, and we offer some comments concerning etiology.
J M, Guileyardo, D P, Sarma
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Heterotopic Ossification Revisited

Orthopedics, 2011
Heterotopic 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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OSSIFICATION

American Journal of Diseases of Children, 1931
Ossification is a local transformation of fibrous tissue into solid bone, the constituents of which are derived from the blood. The mechanism of this local chemical change is not understood, and so the problems of normal and pathologic calcification have been approached essentially from the systemic standpoint.
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Meniscal ossification

Skeletal Radiology, 1994
Ossicles appearing in the medial menisci of three patients appeared to be post-traumatic in two and developmental in one. The histologic analysis in the two post-traumatic patients showed relatively normal bone and cartilage, but without the specific structural cartilaginous adaptations found in a naturally occurring large animal model.
J A, Ogden   +3 more
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