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  2. Acetabular fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetabular_fracture

    Elementary fracture Description Associated fractures Description Posterior wall: This is the most common variety of acetabular fracture. It typically occurs due to dashboard injury; when a person travelling in a vehicle involved in a head-on collision, the force applied over the flexed knee travels along the femur bone to the head of the femur, breaking the posterior wall of the acetabulum.

  3. Acetabular labrum tear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetabular_labrum_tear

    An acetabular labrum tear or hip labrum tear is a common injury of the acetabular labrum resulting from a number of causes including running, hip dislocation, and deterioration with ageing. Most are thought to result from a gradual tear due to repetitive microtrauma .

  4. Protrusio acetabuli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protrusio_acetabuli

    Protrusio acetabuli is an uncommon defect of the acetabulum, the socket that receives the femoral head to make the hip joint. The hip bone of the pelvic bone/girdle is composed of three bones, the ilium, the ischium and the pubis. In protrusio deformity, there is medial displacement of the femoral head in that the medial aspect of the femoral ...

  5. Traction (orthopedics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traction_(orthopedics)

    Buck's traction, involving skin traction. It is widely used for femoral fractures, low back pain, acetabular fractures and hip fractures. [2] Skin traction rarely causes fracture reduction, but reduces pain and maintains the length of the bone. [2] Dunlop's traction – humeral fractures in children; Russell's traction; Halo-gravity traction

  6. Hip dislocation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip_dislocation

    Posterior dislocations is when the femoral head lies posteriorly after dislocation. [5] It is the most common pattern of dislocation accounting for 90% of hip dislocations, [5] and those with an associated fracture are categorized by the Thompson and Epstein classification system, the Stewart and Milford classification system, and the Pipkin system (when associated with femoral head fractures).

  7. “They’re Not Dead Until They’re Warm”: 30 ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/65-unsettling-medical-facts-not...

    Image credits: NoSwimmers45 #3. Endometriosis (tissue from the womb) is not cancer. But it can send out cells that spread through your internal organs and grow, stick your guts together or block ...

  8. Hip replacement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip_replacement

    Intraoperative acetabular fracture. Intraoperative fractures may occur. After surgery, bones with internal fixation devices in situ are at risk of periprosthetic fractures at the end of the implant, an area of relative mechanical stress. Post-operative femoral fractures are graded by the Vancouver classification. [31] [32]

  9. Femoral head ostectomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femoral_head_ostectomy

    It can also be indicated in small animals with pelvic fractures, particularly fractures of the acetabulum (socket of the pelvis). [5] Small horses and ponies can have an ostectomy without an osteotomy of the greater trochanter. As a salvage procedure, this is usually performed in those animals which have the specific injury of a fracture of the ...