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Bone
Bone For other uses, see Bone (disambiguation). Gray's illustration of a human femur, a typically recognized bone. Bone, also called osseous tissue, (Latin: "os") is ... animal are, collectively, known as the skeleton. Bone has a different composition than cartilage, ...
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Talk:Bone
Talk:Bone Big bones? There's wide spread talk ... weight loss field that humans have varying bone mass, with some being "big boned". Is ... that, since I've read that the bone mass is usually ~20 pounds, which doesn ... common with people to have, say, 200% bone mass compared to the usual. :-/ Often, these ... would be nice to have the total bone mass in this article, possibly along ...
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Trabecular bone
Trabecular bone Trabecular bone is one of two main types of bone. Trabecular bone is spongy, and makes up the bulk ... of most bones, including the vertebrae, while cortical bone is dense and forms the ...
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Bone marrow
Bone marrow Gray's Anatomy illustration of cells in bone marrow. Bone marrow (or "medulla ossea") is the tissue ... place where new blood cells are produced. Bone marrow contains two types of stem cells ... stromal (which can produce fat, cartilage and bone). Stromal stem cells have the capability ...
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Épiphyse (bone) (translated from French)
Épiphyse (bone) This article treats épiphyse in the direction ofend of a long bone. See also the page of homonymy Épiphyse ... itépiphyse is the end of one long bone, developing separated from the bone lasting the growth, to be welded there ... The épiphyse consists of a layer of cortical bone dense in periphery and spongy ...
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Constitutional diseases of the bone (translated from French)
Constitutional diseases of the bone This page gathers the whole of constitutional diseases of the bone. Constitutional diseases ofbone are the osseous diseases ... genes implied in the formation of the bone, that it is in specific components of the bone or components common to other fabrics of ... the organization The constitutional diseases of the bone are divided into ostéochondrodysplasies and in ...
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Osteoporosis
... DiseasesDB {{{DiseasesDB}}} Osteoporosis is a disease of bone in which bone mineral density (BMD) is reduced and bone microarchitecture is disrupted. Osteoporotic bones are susceptible ... World Health Organization (WHO) as either a bone mineral density 2.5 standard deviations below peak bone mass (20-year-old person standard) ...
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Os (translated from French)
... is composed of an envelope of compact bone, the cortical one, locking up spongy bone. The short bones have their three appreciably ... are composed of a core of spongy bone surrounded of cortical of compact bone. The flat bones ...
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List of subjects in Gray's Anatomy: Alphabetical: C
... Calcarine fissure: Gray's page #820 Calf bone: Gray's page #260 Calices of kidney ... of: Gray's page #408 Canaliculi of bone : Gray's page #89 dental: Gray's ... femoral: Gray's page #625 Haversian, of bone: Gray's page #89 of Huguier : Gray ... Gray's page #1049 Cancellous tissue of bone : Gray's page #86 Canine eminence : Gray ... structure of : Gray's page #500 Capitate bone: Gray's page #226 Capitulum fibulæ : ...
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Hormone replacement therapy (trans)
... lab as techniques for tissue culture improve. Bone: Both estrogens and androgens are necessary in ... both biological males and females for healthy bone. (Young healthy women produce about 10 mg of testosterone monthly. Higher bone mineral density in males is associated with higher serum estrogen.) Bone is not static. It is constantly being reabsorbed and created. Osteoporosis results when bone formation occurs at a rate less ...
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