Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
There are two types of osseous tissue: compact and spongy.
It is the corollary to Wolff's law, which applies to osseous tissue.
Osseous tissue forms the rigid part of the bone organs that make up the skeletal system.
The primary tissue of bone, osseous tissue, is a relatively hard and lightweight composite material.
'Osteoid' is the organic portion of the matrix of Osseous tissue.
In such cases, there is a crack in the osseous tissue that does not completely traverse the width of the bone.
All bones consist of living and dead cells embedded in the mineralized organic matrix that makes up the osseous tissue.
The lateral end of each cartilage is continuous with the osseous tissue of the rib to which it belongs.
Osseous tissue performs numerous functions including:
As opposed to osseous tissue, periosteum has nociceptive nerve endings, making it very sensitive to manipulation.
Osseous tissue, or bone tissue, is the major structural and supportive connective tissue of the body.
Cortical bone, synonymous with compact bone, is one of the two types of osseous tissue that form bones.
Again, as its name implies, compact bone is much denser than cancellous bone, which is the other type of osseous tissue.
CO2 Lasers on Osseous Tissue, Chapter in Textbook.
Both necrosis and caries of bone bear the same relation to the osseous tissue, that gangrene and ulceration do to the soft tissues.
Osteoblasts can be stimulated to increase bone mass through increased secretion of osteoid and by inhibiting the ability of osteoclasts to break down osseous tissue.
This differs from sesamoid bones, which are made of osseous tissue and whose function primarily is to protect the nearby tendon and to increase its mechanical effect.
Heterotrophic ossification can result from certain trauma as it is an abnormal growth of osseous tissue in non-osseous tissue (e.g. muscle tissue).
Osseous integration, the apparent direct attachment or connection of osseous tissue to an inert alloplastic material without intervening connective tissue.
Compared to compact bone (cortical bone), which is the other type of osseous tissue, it has a higher surface area but is less dense, softer, weaker, and less stiff.
Formation of osseous tissue in soft tissues such as the lungs, eyes, arteries, or other organs is known as ectopic calcification, dystrophic calcification, or ectopic ossification.
Symptoms present as bony ankylosis, in which osseous tissue fuses two bones together reducing mobility, which is why fibrous ankylosis is also known as false ankylosis.
The distraction rate must be gradual, as a rapid rate of distraction will result in a fibrous union in which the bone pieces are joined by fibrous, rather than osseous tissue.
One of the types of tissue that makes up bone is the mineralized osseous tissue, also called bone tissue, that gives it rigidity and a coral-like three-dimensional internal structure.
Osteonectin has been localized in a variety of tissues, it is found in greatest abundance in osseous tissue, tissues characterized by high turnover (such as intestinal epithelium), basement membranes and certain neoplasms.