Results 311 to 320 of about 127,342 (358)
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Revista Española de Anestesiología y Reanimación (English Edition), 2020
P, Escudero-Acha +2 more
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P, Escudero-Acha +2 more
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Archives of Surgery, 1936
To explain the process by which bone is formed two theories have long existed, the chemical, or humoral, theory and the cellular, or vital, theory. These theories diverge principally in respect to whether or not osteoblasts take a part, secretory or otherwise, in the synthesis of the mineral elements into bone. Exponents of both views agree, obviously,
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To explain the process by which bone is formed two theories have long existed, the chemical, or humoral, theory and the cellular, or vital, theory. These theories diverge principally in respect to whether or not osteoblasts take a part, secretory or otherwise, in the synthesis of the mineral elements into bone. Exponents of both views agree, obviously,
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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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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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Ectopic ossification following total hip replacement. Incidence and a method of classification.
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. American volume, 1973A. Brooker +3 more
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Macrophages in bone fracture healing: Their essential role in endochondral ossification.
Bone, 2018C. Schlundt +11 more
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Pathophysiology of Heterotopic Ossification
Orthopaedic Nursing, 2013Heterotopic ossification (HO) is a pathologic condition that leads to the development of bone within nonosseous soft tissues. A common site for HO development is at the hip. The bone that forms is believed to develop through stimulation by cellular mediators and altered neurovascular signaling.
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