Results 151 to 160 of about 6,710 (210)

[Fractures of the tarsal navicular bone].

open access: yesTidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke, 1987
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Coalitions of the Tarsal Bones

Foot and Ankle Clinics, 2018
Tarsal coalitions are the result of impaired mesenchymal separation of the tarsal bones. The most common types include calcaneonavicular or talocalcaneal coalitions. Subtalar stiffness results in pathologic kinematics with increased risk of ankle sprains, planovalgus foot deformity, and progressive joint degeneration.
Georg, Klammer   +2 more
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FRACTURES OF THE TARSAL BONES

Orthopedic Clinics of North America, 2001
Fractures involving the midtarsal bones are relatively uncommon. The morbidity associated with these injuries can be significant, however. Accurate diagnosis and appropriate treatment can help restore midfoot function and decrease the incidence of chronic pain.
S J, Pinney, B J, Sangeorzan
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Tarsal bone disintegration in leprosy

Clinical Radiology, 1979
Tarsal bone disintegration is characterised by fragmentation and progressive collapse of one or more tarsal bones. It occurs in 10% of leprosy patients, and is responsible for many severe foot deformities associated with this disease. The main cause is micro-traumata, but sensory impairment, sepsis and osteoporosis are predisposing factors.
G, Harverson, A G, Warren
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Peculiar chondroblastoma involving multiple tarsal bones

Skeletal Radiology, 2010
A case of peculiar chondroblastoma involving multiple tarsal bones in a 49-year-old woman is described. The patient presented with pain and swelling of the right foot. Radiographs revealed a lytic expansile lesion of medial, intermediate, and lateral cuneiform bones, navicular, cuboid, and tarsal bones of the right foot, indicating a malignant tumor ...
Masaharu, Fukunaga   +2 more
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Identification of sex from tarsal bones

Cells Tissues Organs, 1975
Bone weight as a discriminative factor for identification of sex was studied in tarsal bones (172 calcanei and 164 tali) from the Varanasi region. The DPs for the weight of these bones identified sex correctly in a good percentage of cases, especially from the male bones.
S, Singh, S P, Singh
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Central tarsal bone fracture in a cat

Veterinary and Comparative Orthopaedics and Traumatology, 2016
SummaryFracture of the central tarsal bone is an uncommon injury in dogs and occurs predominantly in racing Greyhounds. To the authors’ knowledge, this type of fracture has not been described previously in cats. This case report describes a five-year-old Domestic Shorthair cat referred to the Centro Veterinario Luni Mare because of lameness, swelling ...
Filippo, Cinti   +5 more
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Köhlerʼs Bone Disease of the Tarsal Navicular

Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics, 1995
Fourteen patients with Köhler's bone disease of the tarsal navicular in 16 feet were reviewed at an average follow-up of 31 years 6 months after diagnosis. The type and length of treatment did not affect the final outcome; however, short-leg cast immobilization did decrease the duration of symptoms.
J L, Borges, J T, Guille, J R, Bowen
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Essential osteolysis of carpal and tarsal bones

The British Journal of Radiology, 1978
Essential osteolysis of carpal and tarsal bones is a rare disease which causes progressive shrinkage of these bones and may be associated with nephritis and hypertension. A familial variant has been reported. It has been variously described as essential osteolysis with nephropathy (Torg and Steel, 1968), familial osteolysis of carpal and tarsal bones ...
P H, Amin, A N, Evans
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