sodium-morrhuate and Ankylosis

sodium-morrhuate has been researched along with Ankylosis* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for sodium-morrhuate and Ankylosis

ArticleYear
Experimentally induced ankylosis and facial asymmetry in the macaque monkey.
    Journal of maxillofacial surgery, 1981, Volume: 9, Issue:4

    Six Macaca nemestrina were used for induction of ankylosis by different methods. One TMJ capsule was either (a) mechanically damaged, (b) injected with sodium morrhuate, or (c) injected with a strain of Staphylococcus aureus. The other capsule served as a control. Facial asymmetry of varying degrees was evident from dry-skull preparations and histologically. Sodium morrhuate caused the least degree of alteration; mechanical damage, the most. The effects of Staph. aureus injection into the TMJ seemed to depend upon the length of time elapsed since injection. In one animal there was no change at autopsy after two injections several weeks apart, once on each side; in the other, the capsule injected initially showed no change at autopsy, whereas that injected several weeks prior to autopsy was considerably altered. Induction of ankylosis was achieved with varying degrees of success, causing differing degrees of facial asymmetry.

    Topics: Animals; Ankylosis; Facial Asymmetry; Macaca nemestrina; Mandibular Condyle; Sodium Morrhuate; Staphylococcal Infections; Temporomandibular Joint; Time Factors

1981