Skip to main content

Search the Library

Full-text search across all chapters and sections

Also searching for:Asymptomatic ConditionsAsymptomatic StatesPresymptomatic DiseasesPre-Symptomatic DiseasesAsymptomatic Conditionvia MeSH
Showing 110 of 35 results for Asymptomatic Diseases

25.  Osteonecrosis of the femoral head

conditions III JAMA Psychiatry 8, 2015;72: 757-766 doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2015.0584. 39. Hernigou P, Habibi A, Bachir D & Galacteros F. The natural history of asymptomatic
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →

13.  Infection risk

conditions to reduce the risk for infection. A team approach with consultation with nephrology and internal medicine can help optimize patients for TJA and decrease the risk for PJI.82,91 Urinary tract infections Females are 50 times more likely to develop urinary tract infections (UTIs) than males.92
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →

5.  Arthroplasty in the hypermobile patient

asymptomatic GJH as well as for EDS is poorly understood, although theories include the influence of hormones or societal factors.4,7 Other syndromic causes of joint hypermobility include Down syndrome, Marfan syndrome, and osteogenesis imperfecta (OI).9,10 These are all genetic disorders of connective tissue
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 95

Case 73 Boxed In

pre-symptomatic father. She was found to have 115 repeats (normal: ≤35; typical childhood onset: >80) and died 4 years after onset. Childhood HD is notable for rigidity and/or dystonia rather than chorea, which dominates in adult HD. Children may develop chorea later; this patient did 2 years after onset
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 8363524232526Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 95

Case 73 Boxed In

pre-symptomatic father. She was found to have 115 repeats (normal: ≤35; typical childhood onset: >80) and died 4 years after onset. Childhood HD is notable for rigidity and/or dystonia rather than chorea, which dominates in adult HD. Children may develop chorea later; this patient did 2 years after onset
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 9123456798765Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 95

Case 73 Boxed In

pre-symptomatic father. She was found to have 115 repeats (normal: ≤35; typical childhood onset: >80) and died 4 years after onset. Childhood HD is notable for rigidity and/or dystonia rather than chorea, which dominates in adult HD. Children may develop chorea later; this patient did 2 years after onset
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 9123456780105Book detail →

22.  Periprosthetic fractures about the knee

condition. Type I: A type I Rorabeck and Taylor fracture is a nondisplaced fracture with a well-fixed femoral component of the prosthesis (see Fig. 22.1A). Type I fractures may be treated nonoperatively with immobilization and restricted weight bearing in certain patients. Stabilization with plating or nailing
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →

16.  Patellofemoral arthritis in the female patient

disease of the patellofemoral joint is seen in a wide age range of individuals. In 2017 Hart et al. reported on the prevalence of radiographic and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-defined PF OA. They found that approximately half of all individuals with knee pain or radiographic OA have
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 57

Case 41 Cerebral Malaria

state of asymptomatic parasitemia. It is therefore possible for a comatose febrile child to have a chronic
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 9123456798765Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 57

Case 41 Cerebral Malaria

state of asymptomatic parasitemia. It is therefore possible for a comatose febrile child to have a chronic
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 8363524232526Book detail →
Also search PubMed

Search the National Library of Medicine for peer-reviewed articles