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Query: UNIPROT:P50502 (
Hip
)
7,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hip
arthroplasty using the Thompson femoral prosthesis with methyl methacrylate fixation was performed on 109 hips in 106 patients. During an average follow-up period of 36 months, 26 patients died. Fifty-one procedures were performed for fresh fractures of the femoral neck and results were satisfactory in this group provided the patient was minimally active. Results were unsatisfactory in patients who had idiopathic avascular necrosis (18), painful, failed noncemented prostheses (6), and
osteoarthritis
(3). In these last three groups, one-half required conversion to total hip arthroplasty and an additional one-third had pain. Reoperation was required in 22 cases. Intraoperative death occurred in one elderly patient after insertion of cement. Results suggest that the primary indication for this procedure is in the minimally ambulatory or nonambulatory elderly osteoporotic patient who has a fresh fracture of the femoral neck.
...
PMID:Results after hemiarthroplasty of the hip using a cemented femoral prosthesis. A review of 109 cases with an average follow-up of 36 months. 86 30
We followed up 34 secondary
osteoarthritis
patients with 38 hips treated by valgus-flexion osteotomy between 1979 and 1985. The average age of the patients at surgery was 45 years and the follow-up period ranged from 5 to 11 years. After surgery, the clinical evaluations were made according to the JOA
Hip
Score which remained unchanged in all 38 hips for 5 years. After 6 years there were some hips whose score declined with time. It was found that the preoperative extension-flexion range was the factor that was most closely associated with the result of the surgery (p less than 0.01). Radiological examination at 5 years revealed that the joint space had been widely broadened and the trabecular structure nearly normalized in 23 hips (60.5%), while 15 hips (39.5%) showed a slight degree of joint space broadening and were left with sclerosis and pseudocysts. After a lapse of 10 years or more, in 13 hips out of 10 patients, seven were found to have osteoarthritic changes and revision had to be done by THR in 2 patients. Valgus-flexion osteotomy can therefore be said to provide one of the useful means to preserve joints when employed in middle-aged patients with secondary OA.
...
PMID:Valgus-flexion osteotomy for middle-aged patients with advanced osteoarthritis of the hip: a clinical and radiological evaluation. 159 92
Hip
and buttock pains in adults require careful evaluation to determine exactly what anatomical structure the patient is referring to when presenting with 'pain in the hip'. Pain in the posterior hip region and buttocks usually originates from dysfunction of the lumbosacral spine.
Osteoarthritis
of the hip is an important disorder that can refer pain to the anteromedial aspect of the knee.
...
PMID:Hip and buttock pain in adults. 162 74
Haemochromatosis (HC) is a group of phenotypically heterogeneous clinical syndromes, which may have a common molecular basis. Classical genetic haemochromatosis (GHC) is one of these syndromes and is a disorder of iron storage due to an increase in intestinal iron absorption, which results in progressive and massive iron deposition leading to fibrosis and organ malfunction. The liver, pancreas, heart and pituitary are commonly involved. There is a specific arthropathy and an association with osteoporosis. Clinically, the arthropathy may resemble rheumatoid arthritis, with acute attacks of inflammation associated with bilateral destruction of the metacarpophalangeal joints. However, bony joint swelling may occur, suggestive of
osteoarthritis
.
Hip
arthritis may be unduly severe and disabling. Haemochromatosis arthritis is composed of three radiographic categories: isolated chondrocalcinosis, hypertrophic
osteoarthritis
which is indistinguishable from pyrophosphate associated arthropathy, and disease specific changes such as subchondral radiolucency of the femoral head, hook-like osteophytes on the metacarpal heads and a degenerative predilection for the metacarpophalangeal joint rather than the scapholunate. The characteristic histological changes are: abnormal amounts of iron deposits, little or no signs of synovial inflammation and CPPD deposition. Subchondral radiolucency of the femoral head and atypical stripping of the cartilage from the subchondral bone are thought to be specific radiographic and histological changes of HC. The pathogenesis of HC arthritis has been associated with the presence of iron in joint tissue, a defect in cartilage metabolism and immunological dysfunction. Treatment has little effect on clinical, radiological or histological progression.
...
PMID:Rheumatic manifestations of haemochromatosis. 175 88
Osteoarthritis
(OA) is a common painful inflammatory condition occurring mainly in the later half of life.
Hip
and knee are the joints mostly affected. Petiveria alliacea (tipi) popularly known as an anti-rheumatic medicine, has been used by OA patients to relief pain. This one-week cross-over double-blind trial has preliminary evaluated the analgesic effect of tipi tea in 14 patients with hip and knee OA. Imperata exaltata (sape) was used as the Placebo tea. The pain assessments that were made at baseline and before the start of the second treatment period by treatment groups were comparable. While taking tipi or placebo tea patients experienced a statistically significant improvement in pain on motion and pain at night. The comparison between the improvements reported while on tipi and placebo tea, however, did not disclose any statistically significant difference. At the conclusion of the study 7 patients preferred tipi tea and 6 preferred placebo tea (NS). Two patients reported insomnia, one during placebo treatment and the other during tipi treatment.
...
PMID:The effectiveness of tipi in the treatment of hip and knee osteoarthritis--a preliminary report. 184 10
The study of the pattern of
osteoarthritis
in different populations may yield valuable aetiological clues and also allow subtypes to be defined. Over one year 252 osteoarthritic joints from 140 patients seen at a West African teaching hospital were prospectively reviewed. The knee was the joint most often affected.
Hip
and hand disease, as well as Heberden's nodes, were uncommon. Joint disease was predominantly monoarticular; no patient had three or more sites affected.
...
PMID:Pattern of osteoarthritis in a West African teaching hospital. 199 62
Five hundred subjects with symptomatic limb joint
osteoarthritis
, who had been referred to a rheumatologist, were enrolled into a continuing study. They comprised 342 women (mean age 65.3) and 158 men (mean age 59.7), with a mean symptom duration of 15.4 years at entry. Only 31 patients (6%) had symptomatic
osteoarthritis
of one joint alone; however, in a further 205 (41%) the disease was limited to one site. One hundred and eighty two (36.4%) had two sites affected and 82 (16.4%) three or more sites of symptomatic
osteoarthritis
. Of 847 affected joints the most commonly involved were 349 (41.2%) knees, 254 (30%) hands, and 161 (19%) hips.
Hip
disease stood out as a separate entity, often occurring alone, and having a stronger male preponderance and different associations than
osteoarthritis
at other joint sites. Knee and hand disease were significantly associated in women. Obesity, hypertension, and Heberden's nodes were common. The number of sites affected, as well as the distribution, was strongly related to age as well as sex, suggesting that polyarticular
osteoarthritis
arises from slow acquisition of new joint sites in a non-random distribution. 'Generalised'
osteoarthritis
did not emerge as a distinct entity.
...
PMID:Study of 500 patients with limb joint osteoarthritis. I. Analysis by age, sex, and distribution of symptomatic joint sites. 199 77
Hip
arthroscopic examination of 196 joints was performed in 104 patients treated during the past 4 years. Of these, 11 joints were treated by arthroscopic surgery. We have developed a technique using a two-directional approach that facilitates a global view of joint areas and allows simpler performance of surgical procedures. Removal of loose bodies, joint debridement in
osteoarthritis
, and synovectomy in rheumatoid arthritis are good indications for arthroscopic surgery of the hip joint. Short-term follow-up was satisfactory, and a reduction of pain was obtained in all patients. Although the joint space of the hip is narrower and the operative technique is more difficult to perform than in the knee, we believe that arthroscopic surgery of the hip is a suitable method in selected cases.
...
PMID:Arthroscopic surgery of the hip joint. 206 33
Studies from the USA and UK indicate that the back, neck and shoulder and the lower limb (particularly the hip, knee, ankle and foot) are the most frequent sites of injury among dancers. Most injuries are soft tissue injuries. Most dancers experience injuries at some time and about half have chronic injuries. Shoulder injuries appear to be caused by frequent or unaccustomed lifting, and are treated by rest and oral anti-inflammatory medication. Back injuries include sprains, prolapsed or herniated intervertebral discs, and spondylolytic stress fractures. Several risk factors, especially training error, have been identified for overuse injuries.
Hip
injuries include degenerative changes and
osteoarthritis
, stress fractures, bursitis and damage to the sciatic nerve. The most common foot injury is an anterior lateral ligament sprain, which may lead to permanent instability in the ankle. More soundly based research into the prevalence, diagnosis and treatment of injuries is needed.
...
PMID:Injuries to dancers. Prevalence, treatment and prevention. 218 33
Hip
surgery is the most common major orthopedic procedure performed in the elderly. The indications are fracture and pain secondary to
degenerative arthritis
. Patients undergoing hip replacement for arthritis have excellent outcomes with decreased pain, increased mobility, and a low mortality. Age should not be a contraindication to hip replacement, with patient selection being made on the basis of symptomatology and overall health. In hip fracture, the prognosis is more guarded. Poor functional outcome results from complications of the fracture, such as avascular necrosis of the femoral head and fracture nonunion in femoral neck fractures and instability with delayed weight bearing in intertrochanteric fractures. In addition, patients sustaining hip fracture are more likely to have significant comorbidity and subsequent perioperative complications. Pressure ulcers, delirium, deep venous thrombosis, urinary retention and urinary tract infection, and cardiac events are the most frequent complications seen. These complications can be anticipated and prevented with careful preoperative assessment and post-operative prophylactic management. A team approach including the orthopedic surgeon, primary care physician, nursing staff, and physical therapists is essential for optimal outcome.
...
PMID:Surgical management of the hip in the elderly patient. 219 20
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