Results 251 to 260 of about 47,065 (307)
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Topics in Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 1989
MRI is the procedure of choice for diagnosing most internal derangements. MRI provides images that not only demonstrate bony detail but show excellent representation of soft tissues in both anatomic and semifunctional relationships. MRI does not use ionizing radiation and has no known adverse effects.
Harms Se, Fulmer Jm
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MRI is the procedure of choice for diagnosing most internal derangements. MRI provides images that not only demonstrate bony detail but show excellent representation of soft tissues in both anatomic and semifunctional relationships. MRI does not use ionizing radiation and has no known adverse effects.
Harms Se, Fulmer Jm
+8 more sources
Temporomandibular Joint Osteoarthrosis and Temporomandibular Joint Hypermobility
CRANIO®, 1993For studying the relationship between condylar hypermobility of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) and osteoarthrosis (OA), 13 patients with bilateral condylar hypermobility were evaluated clinically and radiographically, 30 years after non-surgical treatment.
Lambert G.M. de Bont +4 more
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2018
This chapter discusses Wilkes’s paper on the temporomandibular joint including the design of the study (outcome measures, results, conclusions, and a critique).
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This chapter discusses Wilkes’s paper on the temporomandibular joint including the design of the study (outcome measures, results, conclusions, and a critique).
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Gout in the temporomandibular joint
Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Tandheelkunde, 2016A 76-year-old woman, with a medical history of diabetes mellitus and hypertension, presented herself to an oral and maxillofacial surgeon with a sudden pre-auricular swelling of the right temporomandibular joint. As a result of the atypical clinical appearance and signs of local destruction in the initial panoramic x-ray, a malign process was first ...
Deferm, J.T. +4 more
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Temporomandibular Joint Reconstruction
Alpha Omegan, 2009Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) reconstruction presents unique problems because of the integral and complex roles this joint plays in establishing and maintaining proper form and function of the stomatognathic system. The TMJ not only acts as a secondary growth center for the mandible in prepubescence, but it is also essential for the functions of ...
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Temporomandibular-Joint Afflictions
New England Journal of Medicine, 1978PATIENTS with temporomandibular-joint disorders fall into two large groups: those with organic joint abnormalities, including ankylosis, neoplasia, trauma, and arthritis; and those with facial pain, noise in the temporomandibular joint and restricted motion without organic joint disease.
Walter C. Guralnick +2 more
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Dislocation of the temporomandibular joint
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology, and Endodontology, 2000Summary Many treatment modalities are available for mitigation of pain and dysfunction of the habitually dislocating temporomandibular joint. In most cases, more conservative methods provide only temporary alleviation of symptoms, and recurrence is common. Surgical intervention has generally been considered the more effective definitive treatment. No
Christopher W. Shorey, John H. Campbell
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Physiology of the temporomandibular joint
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1966Abstract Clinical investigation has reasonably established that it is not abnormal for the condyle to move anterior to the eminence during mouth opening. The mechanism of temporomandibular joint dislocation has been explained as being the result of muscle incoordination and/or muscular spasm.
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The temporomandibular joint—A diginglymus joint
The Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry, 1975T i e temporomandibular joint is most commonly described in literature as a "ginglymo-arthrodial" joint. The ginglymus or hinge movement is attributed to the lower compartment and the arthrodial or gliding movement to the upper compartment. This widely prevalent view is espoused by many authors 11'' of journal articles and in most textbooks ...
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