Results 171 to 180 of about 7,197 (202)
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Skeletal Fluorosis

Clinical Nuclear Medicine, 2023
Abstract A 27-year-old man with polysubstance abuse including methamphetamine, fentanyl, and 1.5 years of electronics compressed gas duster inhalation presented following an assault. Radiologic imaging performed for suspected fractures revealed periosteal reaction, cortical thickening with increased bone density, and ligament and tendon ...
Maria M, Gerges   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Skeletal Fluorosis

New England Journal of Medicine, 2021
Lakshman Meena, Ranjan Gupta
openaire   +3 more sources

Skeletal scintigraphic findings in endemic skeletal fluorosis

Nuclear Medicine Communications, 1993
Endemic skeletal fluorosis is characterized by bone, joint and muscle pain, progressive ankylosis of various joints and crippling deformities. Whole body skeletal scintigraphy with 99Tcm-methylene diphosphonate was performed for 17 symptomatic subjects suffering from this disorder.
S K, Gupta   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Paleopathology of skeletal fluorosis

American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1999
Skeletal fluorosis is one of a range of conditions causing excessive ossification and joint ankylosis in skeletons. It is rarely considered, however, in differential diagnoses of palaeopathological lesions. This paper considers the identification of skeletal fluorosis in a skeletal sample from the island of Bahrain, Arabian Gulf, dating to ca.
openaire   +2 more sources

5 Occupational skeletal fluorosis

Baillière's Clinical Rheumatology, 1989
Summary A 20-30 years' occupational and/or environmental exposure to fluorine may cause osteosclerosis, especially of the spine and pelvic bones, and calcification of spinal ligaments. The radiological picture may mimic many other diseases, especially ankylosing spondylitis, diffuse idiopathic hyperostosis, and rare bone diseases, such as Albers ...
László Németh, Éva Zsögönmd
openaire   +1 more source

Skeletal fluorosis causing high cervical myelopathy

Journal of Clinical Neuroscience, 2009
Skeletal fluorosis is endemic in some parts of the world and is the result of life-long ingestion of high amounts of fluoride in drinking water. Its clinical presentation is characterized mostly by bone and dental changes with later ossification of many ligaments and interosseous membranes.
Kumar, Hrishikesh   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

SKELETAL FLUOROSIS IN IMMOBILIZED EXTREMITIES

Acta Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica Section A Pathology, 1975
The effect of immobilization on skeletal fluorosis was studied in growing rabbits. One hind leg was immobilized by an external fixation device extending below the wrist joint and above the knee joint, the extremity being in a straight position after severance of the sciatic nerve. The animals, aged 7 weeks at the beginning of the experiment, were given
openaire   +2 more sources

Histopathological assessment of endemic skeletal fluorosis

Calcified Tissue Research, 1974
Nine patients with skeletal fluorosis were subjected to iliac crest biopsy because they presented with stiffness and bone pains. The histopathological findings are correlated with the clinical course, X-ray and laboratory data. All but one of the patients showed an increase in bone surfaces lined by osteoid and in these eight patients resorption of ...
J M, Faccini, S P, Teotia
openaire   +2 more sources

Occupational skeletal fluorosis.

Bailliere's clinical rheumatology, 1989
A 20-30 years' occupational and/or environmental exposure to fluorine may cause osteosclerosis, especially of the spine and pelvic bones, and calcification of spinal ligaments. The radiological picture may mimic many other diseases, especially ankylosing spondylitis, diffuse idiopathic hyperostosis, and rare bone diseases, such as Albers-Schönberg ...
L, Németh, E, Zsögön
openaire   +1 more source

Skeletal Fluorosis

2022
Subramanian Shankar, Vivek Vasdev
openaire   +2 more sources

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