(1) Diagnosis and therapy of 125 ruptures of the fibular ligaments and capsulae are reported.
(2) The mixed fibular and tibial branches contained approximately the same amount as the sciatic nerve proper.
(3) Four stress fractures occurred during preseason training (two fibular, one second metatarsal, and two fourth metatarsal stress fractures).
(4) Among these, 30 were grafts of the fibular shaft and 16 were grafts of the fibular head.
(5) A technique using a fibular graft to locate the center of rotation and provide stability has been used in 9 operations with very satisfying results.
(6) Excluding complications specific to the fibular transfer procedure, the complications in the Group-I patients (six recurrent postoperative infections, one fracture of the graft, and one non-union of a fibular strut graft) were approximately as frequent as those in the Group-II patients (one failure of fusion and two fractures of the graft).
(7) The other complications included recurrence of the hallux valgus in two feet, pain under a fibular sesamoid in one foot, and a tailor's bunion that was unrelated to the operation in one foot.
(8) A 60-year-old female patient received a corrective fibulotomy just below the fibular head under the diagnosis of osteoarthropathy of the left knee joint 3 years ago.
(9) The area of proprioceptive nerve receptors around the distal part of the rat fibula was stripped surgically, and a standard fracture of the fibular shaft was produced.
(10) This lesion is usually associated with ankle trauma, such as lateral ankle sprains, ruptures of the fibular collateral ligaments, and transchondral fractures of the talar dome.
(11) Serial peroneal conduction velocities with analysis of compound muscle action potential (CMAP) amplitude, area and duration performed at Days 1, 2, 5, 7, 14, 21, 37, 80 showed conduction block localized at the fibular head which lasted 14 days and paralleled clinical conditions.
(12) The distal fibular physis also begins as a transverse structure that becomes undulated and has extensive peripheral lappet formation.
(13) In electroneurographic and electromyographic examinations of 37 patients who had taken neuroloptic drugs for many years a delay in the conduction velocity of the ulnar nerve was found in one case, of the fibular nerve in five cases.
(14) The innervation of the vasculature of the dog hindpaw separately controls the series and parallel coupled vessels by means of the tibial, deep fibular, and superficial fibular nerves.
(15) The fibular hemimelia observed in all drug-treated term fetuses stained with alizarin appeared to result from lack of development of the proximal half of the cartilage model.
(16) The fibular nerve was transplanted on to the soleus muscle of the rats.
(17) The highest density of AChE-positive nerve fibres was noticeable in the fibular collateral ligament followed by the tibial collateral ligament, the posterior cruciate ligament, the anterior cruciate ligament and the articular capsule.
(18) The rabbit fibular osteotomy model was used to answer these questions and to identify which components of the clinically used asymmetrical PEMF produce the therapeutic response.
(19) Postoperative results in 21 patients with bone defects that had been treated with a free vascularized fibular graft (FVFG) were evaluated.
(20) Spiral fractures in the shaft or distal metaphysis of the tibia predominated (73%); the incidence of concomitant fibular fracture was low.
Peroneal
Definition:
(a.) Of or pertaining to the fibula; in the region of the fibula.
Example Sentences:
(1) No monosynaptic connexions were found between anterodorsal and posteroventral muscles except between the muscles innervated by the peroneal and the tibial nerve.
(2) An anatomic study of the peroneal artery and vein and their branches was carried out on 80 adult cadaver legs.
(3) The etiology, diagnosis and surgical treatment of stenosing tenosynovitis of the peroneal tendons is presented.
(4) Peroneal nerve palsy may be avoided by careful surgical technique and postoperative dressings.
(5) Peroneal nerve traction does not result in abnormalities of the dorsalis pedis pulse, pain on passive muscle stretch or a tense anterior tibial compartment.
(6) A case report of acute peroneal compartment syndrome occurring in a 25-year-old male softball player is presented, in which neuropraxia of the common peroneal nerve occurred within 8 hr after onset and in which complete recovery occurred after fasciotomy was done 13 hr after onset of symptoms.
(7) Muscles were transected ("cut muscle") to prevent contraction after peroneal nerve stimulation.
(8) Twelve adult rhesus monkeys underwent bilateral resection of a portion of the peroneal nerve followed by placement of autogenous sural nerve interposition fascicular grafts.
(9) "As to the origins of this practice, I'm not certain, but the exuberance of Argentina's public displays of emotion go a long way, since the descamisados of Peron in the 1940s," he adds.
(10) The position of center of pressure is highly correlated to the position of the ankle and peroneal muscle activity.
(11) The peroneal and posterior tibial motor nerve-conduction velocities were inversely related to height (P less than .05 for both).
(12) A. Pyriformis and extensor longus digiti IV muscles of Rana temporaria were denervated by cutting the sciatic or peroneal nerve at various distances from the muscles.
(13) The peroneal and sural nerves were stimulated in an exposed hindlimb preparation; the ipsilateral vagus was stimulated at the cervical level.
(14) The peroneal artery also gave collaterals to form the dorsalis pedis and the plantar arteries.
(15) Stimulation of the neural plaque produced cortical responses in five of the seven but cortical responses with long latencies could be obtained from peroneal nerve stimulation in only two of the seven patients.
(16) We consider them to be bony origins of ligaments: at the sciatic tuber--the bony origin of the sacrotuberal ligament, at the distal fibula--the bony origin of the peroneal compartment of the retinaculum mm extensorum inferius.
(17) Orthodromic conduction in motor fibres and F wave were analysed in the median, ulnar, peroneal and tibial nerves in groups of 30 subjects: one control and one comprising patients with chronic alcoholism without detectable clinically damage to the peripheral nervous system.
(18) Electrical stimulation of the superficial peroneal nerve that activates C fibers produces a segmental reflex in the unanesthetized decerebrate-spinal cat (Koll, Hasse, Schutz and Muhlberg, 1963).
(19) Conduction changes were found in 21 peroneal nerves, 15 ulnar nerves, 12 median nerves, 7 tibial nerves and 2 radial nerves.