enerbol and Arthritis

enerbol has been researched along with Arthritis* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for enerbol and Arthritis

ArticleYear
THE SPECIAL ORTHOPEDIC HOSPITAL--PAST AND PRESENT.
    Canadian Medical Association journal, 1964, Dec-26, Volume: 91

    Pioneer orthopedic institutions established in Europe in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, and in the U.S.A. in the second half of the 19th and the first decade of the 20th century, can trace their ancestry in ideas back to the practice and teachings of Hippocrates. Experience in treatment of great numbers of injured soldiers in the First World War opened a new era in reconstructive surgery of the locomotor system.After the Second World War, in advanced nations the pattern of crippling diseases showed a spectacular change. Problems that justify the existence of large special orthopedic hospitals are, in children, the more complex congenital deformities, cerebral palsies, and the increasing number of injuries due to hazards of modern life; in the adult, the reconstructive surgery of trauma and of arthritis.In modern orthopedic hospitals physicians have joined orthopedic surgeons in the study of the natural history of the various forms of arthritis. These centres provide facilities for biomechanical research and postgraduate training which acute general hospitals cannot offer.

    Topics: Adult; Arthritis; Back; Cerebral Palsy; Child; Europe; History; History, Ancient; History, Medieval; History, Modern 1601-; Hospitals; Hospitals, General; Hospitals, Special; Humans; Life; Military Personnel; Orthopedics; Physicians; Plastic Surgery Procedures; Research; United Kingdom; United States; World War I; World War II

1964
[Nodose rheumatism in the seventh month of life].
    Osterreichische Zeitschrift fur Kinderheilkunde und Kinderfursorge, 1950, Volume: 4, Issue:2

    Topics: Arthritis; Arthritis, Rheumatoid; Humans; Life; Rheumatic Diseases

1950
Dysplasia of the hip; a factor in the development of static osteoarthropathy.
    California medicine, 1949, Volume: 70, Issue:5

    Dysplasia of the hip is associated with a shallow acetabulum. It may be present and unrecognized until middle age when arthritic changes develop as a result of repeated microtraumata. By that time the process is irreversible. It can be recognized in infancy by roentgenographic study of the hips, and corrective measures can be taken to develop a normal hip and so prevent the crippling arthritis of later life. Although it is not certain that dysplasia develops in every person having a shallow acetabulum, this structural abnormality is known to be a strongly predisposing factor and therefore should be corrected.

    Topics: Acetabulum; Arthritis; Bone Diseases; Dioctyl Sulfosuccinic Acid; Disabled Persons; Female; Hip; Humans; Hyperplasia; Joint Diseases; Life; Middle Aged

1949