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Abstracts
Orthopädie für Hausärzte Verlag Hans Huber
Erkrankungen des Bewegungsapparats beanspruchen Hausärzte etwa in 15 aller Konsultationen, und nicht immer kann ein Facharzt hinzugezogen werden. Die hausärztliche Kompetenz bei der Behandlung orthopädischer Störungen, insbesondere der Schmerztherapie, steht und fällt mit den Fertigkeiten zur Analyse des Patientenproblems, also bei der Anamneseerhebung und der klinischen Untersuchung. Das muss schnell gehen, zielstrebig und mit geringem Aufwand.
Dieses Buch widmet sich erstmals primär der Diagnostik und Therapie orthopädischer Patienten in der Hausarztpraxis. Es enthält das praxisrelevante Wissen mit vielen Empfehlungen zur bildgebenden Diagnostik und Tipps für Untersuchungstechniken. Dem Hausarzt als Koordinator werden Hinweise gegeben, wann Fachärzte hinzugezogen werden sollten. Präventionsmöglichkeiten werden vorgestellt und Hilfen angeboten, wie Patienten beraten werden sollten.
Computer-assisted placement technique in hip resurfacing arthroplasty - improvement in accuracy? International Orthopaedics
From:
jean-pierre.courpied@cch.ap-hop-paris.fr
To:
sandra.i.krueger@gmx.net
Subject:
International Orthopaedics - Decision on Manuscript ID IO-05-07-300 (D-SW-01)
Body:
17-Jun-2007
Dear Dr. Krüger:
It is a pleasure to accept your manuscript entitled "Computer-assisted placement technique in hip resurfacing arthroplasty: improvement in accuracy?" for publication in International Orthopaedics.
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Thank you for your fine contribution. On behalf of the Editors of International Orthopaedics, we look forward to your continued contributions to the Journal.
Sincerely,
Prof. J.-P. Courpied
Editor-in-Chief,
International Orthopaedics
jean-pierre.courpied@cch.ap-hop-paris.fr
Date Sent:
17-Jun-2007
Am J Med Genet. 1998 Mar 5;76(2):145-9.
Alice Vance ("Das Barenweib"): a historical case of Nievergelt syndrome.
Urban M, Kruger S.
Institut fur Medizinische Genetik, Universitatsklinikum Charite, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Germany.
Keywords
Nievergelt syndrome • phocomelia • mesomelic dysplasia • mesomelic dwarfism • Proteus syndrome • history of medicine • Virchow
Abstract
Several malformed individuals were presented at the World Exhibition in Antwerp in 1894. Among them was Mrs. Alice Vance from Mount Pleasant, Texas, with congenital limb defects, and Mr. Eugen Berry, who had asymmetrical, monstrous enlargement and macrodactyly of the feet, i.e., Proteus syndrome. After the World Exhibition Mrs. Vance presented herself to the public in Castan's Panopticon imitating a bear. She became famous under the stage name "Das Barenweib" ("the bear-like woman") and was examined by several German clinicians, and her malformations were considered to be of high scientific interest. Mrs. Vance had mesomelic dwarfism and her mother was known to have similar malformations. Her limb deficiencies were generally considered a unique congenital condition those days, and the diagnosis of "a maternally inherited malformation of the forearms and the shanks" [Daffner 1898: Munch Med Wochenschr 25:782] was made. Virchow [1897: Verh Berl Ges Ethnol Urgeschichte 29:624], feeling attacked by a daily newspaper stating that the physicians as well as the police of Berlin had missed the diagnosis of an "English disease," eventually exercised his authority and diagnosed Alice Vance as a "phocomelic." Clearly, she was not a phocomelic according to past and current definition of this term. Thus, from a historical point of view, the story illustrates how pressure from the daily press altered the definition of an up-to-then precisely defined medical term for decades. According to the clinical data and an X-ray report available from the literature, Alice Vance had a dominantly inherited type of mesomelic dwarfism. We propose the diagnosis of Nievergelt syndrome.
Publication Types:
Case Reports
Historical Article
PMID: 9511977 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Received: 29 May 1997; Accepted: 1 October 1997 Am. J. Med. Genet. 76:145-149, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Vierig G, Wilms K, Krüger S, Davidowa H (1998 ): "Study on the interaction of serotonin and cholecystokinin in the neostriatum of rats" , In: Elsner N und Wehner R (Hrgb.): Göttingen Neurobiology Report 1998 Vol. ²²: 612 , Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart-New York
Wilms K, Krüger S, Vierig G, Davidowa H (1998 ): "The 5-HT1A receptor agonist 8-OH-DPAT can affect neostriatal neurones comparable to serotonin" , In: Elsner N und Wehner R (Hrgb.): Göttingen Neurobiology Report 1998 Vol. ²²: 610 , Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart-New York
      
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