Use "osteomyelitis" in a sentence

1. Osteomyelitis .

2. Osteomyelitis

3. Acute osteitis/osteomyelitis.

4. • Chronic osteomyelitis

5. Acute osteitis/osteomyelitis. Posterolateral approach.

6. Osteomyelitis, acute arthritis, neuropathic arthropathy.

7. It may also occur as so-called acute endogenic osteomyelitis, such as plasmocellular osteomyelitis and Brodie's abscess.

8. Cloacae/Cloacas) can be found in chronic osteomyelitis.

9. The mean follow-up was 3.7 years for patients with an acute osteomyelitis and 2.7 years for patients with a chronic osteomyelitis.

10. Pubic osteomyelitis is particularly rare and acute osteomyelitis of the distal femur resembling soft tissue sarcoma has not been previously reported in the English literature.

11. Contraindications Acute and chronic osteomyelitis of the forearm bones.

12. The mean duration of i.v. plus oral antimicrobial therapy was 20 plus 22 days for acute osteomyelitis and 20 Plus 25 days for chronic osteomyelitis.

13. Brodie’s abscess is a form of sub-acute pyogenic osteomyelitis.

14. If it's osteomyelitis, an infection eating away at his periosteum...

15. Specific antibiotic treatment must be given during the acute phase of osteomyelitis.

16. In western Europe acute haematogen osteomyelitis (AHOM) is a rare disease.

17. Histological findings were similar to osteomyelitis with a high number of actinomyces colonies.

18. For the diagnosis of acute and chronic osteomyelitis imaging methods have become essential.

19. Uncharacteristic pain of extremities in children should always consider the diagnosis of acute osteomyelitis.

20. Mean incidence of surgical treatment for osteomyelitis prior to reaming: 3.2 operations.

21. Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis is a typical childhood illness, occurring predominantly in boys.

22. We are describing a patient with acute osteomyelitis and bacteremia who developed thrombocytosis.

23. Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is a rare but well-documented complication of chronic osteomyelitis.

24. Osteomyelitis can be subdivided into a bacterial exogenic (post-traumatic/postoperative), bacterial endogenic (hematogenous) and an abacterial type, including the rare group containing primary chronic sclerosing osteomyelitis, which is typically localized in the clavicle.

25. Higher degree open fractures with soiled wounds, sclerosized, impassable bone marrow cavity and acute osteomyelitis.

26. Acute osteomyelitis, a bone infection that predominantly occurs in children, is usually caused by the staph bacteria.

27. In kids and teens , osteomyelitis usually affects the long bones of the arms and legs .

28. Transmission Characteristics and Empiric Precautions by Clinical Presentation: Recommendations for Acute Care Centres Clinical findings Osteomyelitis ADULT:

29. Most forms of acute osteomyelitis can be successfully treated with antibiotics, leading to complete healing without complications.

30. Tissues without Abscessor osteomyelitis), attending theout-patient department of VIMSAR, Burla, were included in this study

31. The patients were considered to have an acute (n=12) or a chronic osteomyelitis (n=16).

32. Acute osteomyelitis may cause diagnostic confusion especially if its location and/or presentation are particularly unusual.

33. Before the antibiotics era, the mortality among patients with acute forms of osteomyelitis was approximately 50 %.

34. When there is clinical suspicion of acute osteomyelitis plain films are still the mainstay of diagnosis.

35. Rare complications such as pylephlebitis, mediastinal adenopathy, osteomyelitis with pathological clavicular fracture, osteitis and spondylitis were observed.

36. Autogenous vaccines were also used in cases of bronchial asthma, septicemia, gonorrhea, candidiasis, and osteomyelitis among others

37. Acute osteitis/osteomyelitis, severe malalignment of the distal tibia, soft tissue infection close to the ankle joint.

38. In principle, the therapy concept of acute and chronic osteomyelitis has generally been accepted and widely applied.

39. Coccidioidomycosis may also spread from the lungs to the skin, bones (causing osteomyelitis), joints, liver, spleen, kidneys, and other tissues

40. Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis (AHO) is an inflammation of bone caused by bacteria that reach the bone via the hematogenous route.

41. In 2 to 5 percent of young children with smallpox, virions reach the joints and bone, causing osteomyelitis variolosa.

42. A percentage of X-rays will be negative even when there is an acute fracture or early osteomyelitis.

43. 13 Objective:probing the function mechanism of ZhengGu TongPiDan in curing dyssymphysis, non-bacteroidal bone putrescence and chronic osteomyelitis.

44. Diagnosis of early and acute periprosthetic infection/acute osteomyelitis is usually straightforward; problems arise in the case of chronic infection.

45. In children and adolescents the clavicle and metaphyseal regions of long bones are typical sites of chronic abacterial osteomyelitis.

46. Joint; Grade 3, deep ulcer with Abscessor osteomyelitis; Grade 4, localized gangrene; and Grade 5, extensive gangrene requiring a major amputation

47. The presentation and management of a case of acute Listeria monocytogenes osteomyelitis in a lady with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia are described.

48. We present two cases of acute osteomyelitis in two young children, affecting the pubic bone and the distal femur respectively.

49. If acute osteomyelitis is suspected in a child, imaging starts with conventional radiography in order to exclude other differential diagnoses.

50. The diagnosis of acute and secondary chronic osteomyelitis of the jaws is made based on clinical findings and radiological imaging.

51. This makes it possible to distinguish the condition from acute and secondary osteomyelitis as well as from other diseases, such as bone tumours.

52. Differences in the clinical and radiologic appearances between the acute and the hematogenic as well as the traumatic osteomyelitis are described.

53. The septic metastatic focal encephaltis (SME) can be caused by any bacterial focus in the body, e. g., infected ulcera, phlegmons, pancreatitis, adnexitis, osteomyelitis.

54. In acute osteomyelitis under stabile conditions the instillation drainage helps spontaneous reossification, in most of these cases bone grafting is not necessary.

55. Acute or chronic osteomyelitis following 2nd and 3rd degree open fractures and after orthopedic surgery, still is a feared post-operative complication.

56. Serious infections experienced by Enbrel-treated patients included cellulitis, gastroenteritis, pneumonia, cholecystitis, osteomyelitis, gastritis, appendicitis, Streptococcal fasciitis, myositis, septic shock, diverticulitis and abscess

57. The purpose of this study was to investigate the outcome of expandable titanium cage implantation in large defects caused by acute vertebral osteomyelitis.

58. After surgical intervention it appears that six weeks of antibiotic therapy is sufficient to eradicate acute as well as chronic osteomyelitis in children.

59. It is emphasized that an acute osteomyelitis or arthritis must be treated within one to three days if complications are to be avoided.

60. For the study, researchers culled the medical records of 290 children admitted to Children's Medical Center Dallas between January 1999 and December 2003 with acute osteomyelitis.

61. The mean temperature at admission was 38.4 and 37.3°C, respectively. The ESR, CRP and WBC were elevated in children with an acute osteomyelitis.

62. Macrophage subtypes were detected in cryostat sections of biopsies from patients with chronic osteomyelitis, acute joint infections and normal bone marrow, using monoclonal antibodies against different macrophage populations.

63. Further indications for CT and MRI in cases of inflammation are the diagnosis of retrotonsillar and parapharyngeal abscesses and ensuing complications as well as the diagnosis of osteomyelitis.

64. Post-traumatic abacterial osteomyelitis of this type may be of clinical importance and requires treatment consisting in the removal of the corroded implant and the adjacent metallotic tissue.

65. Fifty-three patients with osteomyelitis were grouped according to the duration of the disease at presentation, the bone and the part involved, the aetiology, activity, severity and stage of disease.

66. Thus, the manifestation of invasive Candidiasis involving localized structures, such as in Candida osteomyelitis, arthritis, endocarditis, pericarditis, and meningitis, requires prolonged antifungal therapy for at least 4-6 weeks

67. Bloodstream infections include infective endocarditis, central venous catheter-associated Bloodstream infections, primary bacteremia, and those with secondary bacteremia due to focal infections including abscesses, osteomyelitis, urinary tract infections, or pneumonia (Fig

68. The stages of amyloid resorption by neutrophilic leukocytes following an experimentally induced chronical osteomyelitis are examined in spleen, liver and kidneys of mice (C 57 BL/6 J) electron microscopically.

69. Catarrhalis) is a common pathogen in the human upper respiratory tract.This microbe is also implicated in chronic lower respiratory tract infections as well as conjunctivitis, sinusitis, meningitis, otitis media, osteomyelitis, endocarditis, etc

70. Because of the formidable complications, which may be difficult to manage and the difficulty in guaranteeing permanent cure, the best approach is prevention by judicious treatment of acute haematogenous osteomyelitis and of open fractures.

71. This case illustrates the possibility of an acute sinusitis-like presentation of a very rare posterior skull base osteomyelitis in an otherwise healthy young patient by previously non-implicated organisms Streptococcus anginosus and Eikenella Corroden.

72. The incision of the soft tissues is an Approbated method for the surgical treatment of the acute odontogenic osteomyelitis of the lower jaw and for the chronic--the sequestrectomy after the complete detachment of the sequestra

73. ‘In Aerobes with sufficient oxygen, pyruvate is transported to the mitochondrion to undergo further transformations in the Krebs cycle.’ ‘By contrast, only 1 or 2 types of Gram-positive organisms are generally cultured in osteomyelitis, almost universally Aerobes.’

74. The progression of acute haematogenous osteomyelitis into a chronic infection was investigated in a group of ten dogs in which the infection was produced by injection of micropaque barium mixed with Staphylococcus aureus or Salmonella Group C-2 into the tibial nutrient artery.

75. Bone and joint infections (BJI) are characterized by various clinical presentations, according to the site of infection (joint, spine, long bones...), the evolution (acute, chronic), the presence of an implant (prosthetic joint, osteosynthesis), the causative pathogens, patient’s medical condition, and infection route (hematogenous or surgical site infection, contiguous osteomyelitis....).

76. Curettage, surgical scraping, usually of the lining of a body cavity, to clean it of foreign matter, to remove tumours or other growths or diseased tissue (as in the curetting out of diseased bone tissue in osteomyelitis), or to obtain a sample of tissue for diagnosis

77. In 144 pull-through-operations performed for anorectal-atresia, following complications were observed: pneumonia 11%, sepsis 8.3%, peritonitis 5%, bowel obstruction 5%, osteomyelitis 1%, retraction of the pulled-through colon 4%, anal stenosis 16%, secondary megacolon 9%, fistula relapse 8%, mucosal prolapse 4%. Recto-urethral, recto-vesical- and recto-vaginal fistula relapses are managed by interposition of the gracile muscle.