enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. John Thomas sign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Thomas_sign

    Positive John Thomas sign in patient with right femoral enchondroma. The John Thomas sign, [1] also known as the Throckmorton sign, [2] is a slang or joke term used in the field of radiology. It refers to the position of a penis as it relates to pathology on an X-ray of a pelvis. When the penis (visible on the X-ray as a shadow) points towards ...

  3. Proximal femoral focal deficiency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proximal_femoral_focal...

    Type B — The femur bone is shorter on the proximal end (near the hip) and the defect affects both the femoral head (the ball) and the femoral shaft (the long part of the bone). This defect is more severe than type A deformities because it will not heal spontaneously and, at skeletal maturity, the proximal femur (lower part near the knee) will ...

  4. Femoral neck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femoral_neck

    It is often due to osteoporosis; in the vast majority of cases, a hip fracture is a fragility fracture due to a fall or minor trauma in someone with weakened osteoporotic bone. Most hip fractures in people with normal bone are the result of high-energy trauma such as car accidents , falling from heights, or sports injuries.

  5. Hip fracture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip_fracture

    A hip fracture is a break that occurs in the upper part of the femur (thigh bone), at the femoral neck or (rarely) the femoral head. [2] Symptoms may include pain around the hip, particularly with movement, and shortening of the leg. [2] Usually the person cannot walk. [3] A hip fracture is usually a femoral neck fracture.

  6. Crescent sign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crescent_sign

    A radiograph of a left hip joint, which reveals a thin, curvilinear lucent line parallel to the cortical margin of the femoral head, in a patient with avascular necrosis. In radiology , the crescent sign is a finding on conventional radiographs that is associated with avascular necrosis .

  7. X-ray of hip dysplasia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_of_hip_dysplasia

    The superior-lateral coverage of the femoral head. >20° (<55 years old) [notes 2] <24° (>55 years old) [notes 2] >40° indicates overcoverage; Reimer's migration index [9] The percentage of the femoral head that lies outside of the acetabular roof. It is also called the femoral extrusion index. <25% Tönnis angle

  8. Sacroiliac joint dysfunction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacroiliac_joint_dysfunction

    The innominate bones join in the front of the pelvis to form the pubic symphysis, and at back of the sacrum to form the sacroiliac (SI) joints. Each innominate bone (ilium) joins the femur (thigh bone) to form the hip joint; thus the sacroiliac joint moves with walking and movement of the torso. [9]

  9. Zona orbicularis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zona_orbicularis

    The zona orbicularis and proximal hip joint capsule are poorly understood. Recent studies seem to confirm that the proximal to middle part of the articular capsule, including the zona orbicularis, acts biomechanically as a locking ring wrapped around the femoral neck and thus is a key structure for hip stability in distraction.