Legg-Calvé-Perthes (LCPD) is a rare childhood disorder that induces the osteochondrosis of the femoral head. Almost all authors agree that the condition involves the obstruction to the bloody supply of the growing femoral head. The etiology is debated, as some authors claim that the triggering process of LCPD is unknown. Others argue that the onset of this affection can be prompted by several factors such as exogenous causes, trauma, metabolic issues, hematological disease, infections. LCPD has been recognized in archaeological material for nearly a century. The signs of the pathology are well described in the literature, but few paleopathological cases have been described. Here we report morphologic analyses of a skeleton retrieved during ...
International audienceThis case study reviews the first archeological cases of avascular femoral hea...
Background. The nature of the pathological changes observed on the bones of people who lived severa...
An approximately 10 year old child with unusually pronounced pathological alterations of the right t...
Legg-Calvé-Perthes (LCPD) is a rare childhood disorder that induces the osteochondrosis of the femor...
Legg-Calvé-Perthes (LCP) disease is a very uncommon condition that affects one in 10,000 paediatric ...
Idiopathic avascular necrosis of the femoral head, known as Legg-Calve-Perthes disease (LCPD), is on...
A middle-age adult male from the Bronze Age necropolis Torre Velha 3 (Serpa, Portugal) shows an enla...
The skeletal remains of seven individuals (five non-adults and two adults) were recovered during an ...
Skeletal lesions related to metabolic diseases in children have been systematically investigated in ...
Paleopathology enables the identification of bone trauma and the osteoarthritic evidence of disease....
During the archaeological excavations carried out in 2007 in the Medieval cemetery of the Church of ...
none5siDevelopmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) is caused by a delay in the development of the aceta...
Specimens of femoral heads were studied at necropsy in two cases of Legg-Calv#{233}-Perthes ’ diseas...
Aim. This article presents some interesting paleopathological cases from the osteological sample of ...
Evidence of disease was analyzed from the skeletal remains of 11 individuals dating to the post-Medi...
International audienceThis case study reviews the first archeological cases of avascular femoral hea...
Background. The nature of the pathological changes observed on the bones of people who lived severa...
An approximately 10 year old child with unusually pronounced pathological alterations of the right t...
Legg-Calvé-Perthes (LCPD) is a rare childhood disorder that induces the osteochondrosis of the femor...
Legg-Calvé-Perthes (LCP) disease is a very uncommon condition that affects one in 10,000 paediatric ...
Idiopathic avascular necrosis of the femoral head, known as Legg-Calve-Perthes disease (LCPD), is on...
A middle-age adult male from the Bronze Age necropolis Torre Velha 3 (Serpa, Portugal) shows an enla...
The skeletal remains of seven individuals (five non-adults and two adults) were recovered during an ...
Skeletal lesions related to metabolic diseases in children have been systematically investigated in ...
Paleopathology enables the identification of bone trauma and the osteoarthritic evidence of disease....
During the archaeological excavations carried out in 2007 in the Medieval cemetery of the Church of ...
none5siDevelopmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) is caused by a delay in the development of the aceta...
Specimens of femoral heads were studied at necropsy in two cases of Legg-Calv#{233}-Perthes ’ diseas...
Aim. This article presents some interesting paleopathological cases from the osteological sample of ...
Evidence of disease was analyzed from the skeletal remains of 11 individuals dating to the post-Medi...
International audienceThis case study reviews the first archeological cases of avascular femoral hea...
Background. The nature of the pathological changes observed on the bones of people who lived severa...
An approximately 10 year old child with unusually pronounced pathological alterations of the right t...