نتایج جستجو برای: massive osteolysis
تعداد نتایج: 84588 فیلتر نتایج به سال:
Gorham disease is a rare condition characterized by intraosseous neoplastic proliferation of hemangiomatous tissue with progressive, massive osteolysis. We present a pathologically proved case of Gorham disease that involved the left parietal bone in a 23-year-old man. Imaging studies including conventional radiography of the skull, CT, MR imaging, and Technetium-99 m (Tc-99 m) scintigraphy dem...
Wear-induced osteolysis remains a common problem after total knee arthroplasty and may be particularly difficult to detect clinically or radiographically around the femoral component. We describe the use of magnetic resonance imaging to identify particulate-induced osteolysis around the distal femur and proximal tibia in 2 patients with total knee arthroplasties. The extent of the osteolysis wa...
A 39-year-old woman underwent bilateral total hip arthroplasty with conventional, ethylene oxide-sterilised liners when she was a subject in a radiostereometric analysis study. Within 2 years she had rapid polyethylene wear with aggressive, asymptomatic, and periprosthetic osteolysis on both sides. Oral alendronate therapy halted the progression of osteolysis over a year and revision to cross-l...
Primary idiopathic osteolysis (Gorham’s disease) is rare. It is characterised by the spontaneous onset of bone resorption without a known cause. Bones which previously appeared normal begin to resorb, partially or completely. Sometimes only a thin shell of cortical bone remains, and there is usually little replacement by fibrous tissue (Cannon 1986). This process can continue for years but in s...
The most frequent cause of failure after total hip replacement in all reported arthroplasty registries is peri-prosthetic osteolysis. Osteolysis is an active biological process initiated in response to wear debris. The eventual response to this process is the activation of macrophages and loss of bone. Activation of macrophages initiates a complex biological cascade resulting in the final commo...
INTRODUCTION A case of an osteolysis by Mitek anchor-suture is presented. CASE PRESENTATION A case of index finger's flexor digitorum profundus tendon primary reconstruction with the use of Mitek anchor is presented here. Within a 14 month period, Mitek suture anchor caused local foreign body reaction with osteolysis and ulceration of the palmar skin of the finger while on the other hand tend...
The biological mechanisms leading to periprosthetic osteolysis involve both chemokines and the monocyte/macrophage cell lineage. Whether MCP-1 plays a major role in macrophage recruitment in the presence of wear particles is unknown. We tested two hypotheses: (1) that exogenous local delivery of MCP-1 induces systematic macrophage recruitment and (2) that blockade of the MCP-1 ligand-receptor a...
Autophagy mediated CoCrMo particle-induced peri-implant osteolysis by promoting osteoblast apoptosis
Wear particle-induced osteolysis is the leading cause of aseptic loosening, which is the most common reason for THA (total hip arthroplasty) failure and revision surgery. Although existing studies suggest that osteoblast apoptosis induced by wear debris is involved in aseptic loosening, the underlying mechanism linking wear particles to osteoblast apoptosis remains almost totally unknown. In th...
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