Results 151 to 160 of about 24,690 (186)
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Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1993
Massive osteolysis is rare, peculiar, and enigmatic. The clinical, radiographic, and histologic features were reviewed in 11 cases. The patients were generally young (mean age, 20.7 years), and males outnumbered females. More than half the patients had involvement of either the femur or the ribs alone or including the vertebrae.
T C, Shives, J W, Beabout, K K, Unni
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Massive osteolysis is rare, peculiar, and enigmatic. The clinical, radiographic, and histologic features were reviewed in 11 cases. The patients were generally young (mean age, 20.7 years), and males outnumbered females. More than half the patients had involvement of either the femur or the ribs alone or including the vertebrae.
T C, Shives, J W, Beabout, K K, Unni
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The Journal of Arthroplasty, 1995
This is a case report of a 44-year-old patient in whom osteolytic changes that developed around the distal end of the femoral prosthesis appeared to reverse with the use of antiinflammatory medication and pulsed electromagnetic field stimulation. Most reported cases of osteolysis have been described as showing progressive change at a variable rate ...
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This is a case report of a 44-year-old patient in whom osteolytic changes that developed around the distal end of the femoral prosthesis appeared to reverse with the use of antiinflammatory medication and pulsed electromagnetic field stimulation. Most reported cases of osteolysis have been described as showing progressive change at a variable rate ...
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Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1974
Massive osteolysis involving the maxillofacial skeleton is a rare condition. A case of this syndrome occurred involving the mandible primarily.
M J, Black, N J, Cassisi, H F, Biller
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Massive osteolysis involving the maxillofacial skeleton is a rare condition. A case of this syndrome occurred involving the mandible primarily.
M J, Black, N J, Cassisi, H F, Biller
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American Journal of Medical Genetics, 1998
We describe a 9-year-old girl who initially presented at age 4 with evidence of arthritis in her hands, feet, and large joints. Although she had a partial response to anti-inflammatory medications and had some laboratory results consistent with inflammatory disease, radiographs showed carpal and tarsal osteolysis associated with interphalangeal joint ...
D M, Eisenstein +2 more
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We describe a 9-year-old girl who initially presented at age 4 with evidence of arthritis in her hands, feet, and large joints. Although she had a partial response to anti-inflammatory medications and had some laboratory results consistent with inflammatory disease, radiographs showed carpal and tarsal osteolysis associated with interphalangeal joint ...
D M, Eisenstein +2 more
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Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 2004
Osteolysis is defined as the process of progressive destruction of periprosthetic bony tissue, characterized on serial radiographs as progressive radiolucent lines and/or cavitation at the implant-bone or cement-bone interface. Without proper treatment, osteolysis may progress to aseptic loosening and catastrophic failure of the implant.
Khaled J Saleh, Edward M Schwarz
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Osteolysis is defined as the process of progressive destruction of periprosthetic bony tissue, characterized on serial radiographs as progressive radiolucent lines and/or cavitation at the implant-bone or cement-bone interface. Without proper treatment, osteolysis may progress to aseptic loosening and catastrophic failure of the implant.
Khaled J Saleh, Edward M Schwarz
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Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 2001
Since the recognition of aseptic loosening by Charnley in the early 1960s, much information has been gained on the basic science of periprosthetic bone loss. Initially termed cement disease, it now generally is accepted that, in most instances, osteolysis is a manifestation of an adverse cellular response to phagocytosable particulate wear and ...
J J, Jacobs +4 more
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Since the recognition of aseptic loosening by Charnley in the early 1960s, much information has been gained on the basic science of periprosthetic bone loss. Initially termed cement disease, it now generally is accepted that, in most instances, osteolysis is a manifestation of an adverse cellular response to phagocytosable particulate wear and ...
J J, Jacobs +4 more
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Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, 1997
Gorham syndrome (massive osteolysis) is a very rare tumour-like lesion characterized by progressive osteolysis. The diagnosis must be confirmed by the microscopic finding of intramedullary angioma-like vascular structures. We report a case of a 15-year-old boy with a pathological fracture in his left humerus.
K, Sato +5 more
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Gorham syndrome (massive osteolysis) is a very rare tumour-like lesion characterized by progressive osteolysis. The diagnosis must be confirmed by the microscopic finding of intramedullary angioma-like vascular structures. We report a case of a 15-year-old boy with a pathological fracture in his left humerus.
K, Sato +5 more
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Massive Craniofacial Osteolysis
Journal of Craniofacial Surgery, 1995Involvement of the craniofacial skeleton by the process of massive osteolysis has been infrequently recorded. We describe a patient whose extent of craniomaxillofacial bony loss defied combined reconstruction by combined autogenous tissue and alloplastic materials.
Moore, M., Lam, L., Ho, C.
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Idiopathic multicentric osteolysis
American Journal of Roentgenology, 1976A 59 year old while female with striking carpal and tarsal osteolysis is reported. The process primarily involves the carpals and tarsals but includes other sites. The pertinent literature is reviewed and a simplified classification of idiopathic multicentric osteolysis is presented.
T, Tyler, H D, Rosenbaum
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Osteolysis circumscripta evanescans
Pediatric Neurosurgery, 1996A circumscribed radiolucent skull abnormality was detected on plain radiographs obtained to evaluate minor cranial trauma in a young boy. The lesion disappeared on follow-up X-rays performed later in the day. Analysis of the case revealed that the lesion was an artifact resulting from a superimposed hole in a wooden backboard on which the patient was X-
A R, Cohen, C, Rooney
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