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Van C. Mow

    Biomechanics of Diarthrodial Joints
    Biomechanics of Diarthrodial Joints Vol. II
    Basic Orthopaedic Biomechanics
    Basic Orthopaedic Biomechanics and Mechano-Biology - Third Edition
    • Completely revised and updated, the Third Edition of this classic text reflects the latest advances in research on orthopaedic biomechanics and the successful applications of biomechanical principles in fracture fixation, prosthetic implant design, and hip and knee arthroplasty. For this Third Edition, Dr. Mow is joined by new co-editor Rik Huiskes, PhD, an Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Biomechanics and an internationally renowned authority in the field. New chapters cover biomaterials, biomechanical principles of cartilage and bone tissue engineering, and biomechanics of fracture fixation and fracture healing.

      Basic Orthopaedic Biomechanics and Mechano-Biology - Third Edition2004
      5,0
    • Basic Orthopaedic Biomechanics

      • 464 Seiten
      • 17 Lesestunden

      Reviews biomechanical laws governing natural human locomotion and the movement of prosthetic joints. Provides a synthesis of clinical and research data on muscle and joint loads; biomechanical forces; stress-strain behaviours; biomechanics of the spine and of artificial joint fixation and more.

      Basic Orthopaedic Biomechanics1991
    • Part of a two-volume set which discusses the biomechanics of diathrodial joints, this book reviews specialized and interdisciplinary studies on connective tissues from the macroscopic to the molecular level.

      Biomechanics of Diarthrodial Joints Vol. II1990
    • Biomechanics of Diarthrodial Joints

      • 451 Seiten
      • 16 Lesestunden

      Historical folklore indicates that Asklepios (circa 900 BC), the fir t western doctor of ancient Greece, treated many patients with rheumatic diseases of 1 joints,2. Later, Hippocrates (circa 400 BC), who claimed to have learned from Asklepios, used the term arthritis in reference to joint diseases: "When the disease of arthritis strikes, acute inflammation and pain attacks the joints of the body ... ." Indeed, arthritic joint disease dates much farther back into antiquity than Asklepios. Many modern anthropologists have noted degenerative joint disease in the fossils of Neanderthal man (archanthropus europeus petraloniensis) and even in those of dinosaurs. More recent scientific studies on joints date back to the work of the great English anatomist Hunter who wrote "The Structure and Diseases of Articular Cartilage" in the Philosophical Transactions of London in 1743. The notion that osteoarthritis results from the wearing away of cartilage was copiously documented by the histological observations of the German physician Ecker in 1843. This idea was further supported by Pommer (1927) who felt that mechanical stresses played important roles in the initiation and propagation of cartilage lesions leading to osteoarthritis. This same conclusion was reached by the assembled distinguished experts at a National Institutes of Health Workshop 3 held in 1986 .

      Biomechanics of Diarthrodial Joints1990