What's the difference between osteogenesis and osteogenic?
Osteogenesis
Definition:
(n.) Alt. of Osteogeny
Example Sentences:
(1) Osteogenesis imperfecta is the common term for a heterogeneous group of heritable disorders of connective tissue with lethal and nonlethal forms.
(2) No abnormalities were detected in the following syndromes: achondroplasia, diastrophic dwarfism, thanatophoric dwarfism, Jeune disease, spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita, Kozlowski syndrome, osteogenesis imperfecta, polyepiphyseal dysplasia with diabetes mellitus.
(3) Radiological diagnosis is often difficult with an osteolytic appearance without appreciable reactional osteogenesis.
(4) Mesenchyme from older embryos that failed to undergo osteogenesis in serum-free medium did form bone in the presence of NaF.
(5) Light-microscopic findings revealed that osteogenesis gradually became dominant after transient osteoporosis, leading to a disproportional state of the bone remodelling.
(6) It occurs to a variable extent in osteogenesis imperfecta and frequently involves the aortic valve.
(7) The physiology, cell biology, biochemistry, and endocrinologic regulation of induced osteogenesis are areas of active investigation.
(8) In the bone similar cartilage osteoclasia and osteogenesis are rare.
(9) It is indicated that in vitro and at implantation in preliminary infected ordinary and gunshot osseous wounds in rabbits and dogs gentacycol inhibits the growth of aerobic and, that is especially important, anaerobic microflora, limits the development of inflammatory Process and stimulates, to a certain extent, reparative osteogenesis.
(10) Chondrogenesis and osteogenesis of the os penis were caused by androgens, while the rudiments of the os penis were formed independently of androgens.
(11) The theories pertaining to the source and mode of osteogenesis in this case are discussed.
(12) The sequential cellular changes in the implants in response to collagenous bone matrix-induced local bone formation include: binding of fibronectin to matrix, chemotaxis and attachment of progenitor cells, proliferation and differentiation of progenitor cells into chondrocytes, and finally osteogenesis and marrow differentiation.
(13) Four families presenting with familial osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) have been studied: 2 with the lethal type II and 2 with the severe type III form.
(14) Despite a significant difference in axial rigidity, the Ilizarov and Wagner external fixators induced osteogenesis of equal volume.
(15) In osteogenesis imperfecta, the poor formation of collagen leads to abnormally thin bony trabeculae with a poorly formed otic capsule.
(16) Because of its low axial stiffness at low loads and increased stiffness at higher loads, this fixator promotes osteogenesis and reduces strain on the tissues in functional treatment.
(17) Maximal levels of OP-1 mRNA were found in kidney which may explain the phenomenon of epithelial osteogenesis, first described by Huggins in 1931 using epithelium from the urinary tract.
(18) Long-term administration of synthetic salmon calcitonin may be beneficial to young children with osteogenesis imperfecta.
(19) In patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, Marfan syndrome and osteogenesis imperfecta, molecular defects in the type I collagen genes are already known.
(20) One hundred twenty family members in four generations were at risk of inheriting the gene for osteogenesis imperfecta.
Osteogenic
Definition:
(a.) Osteogenetic.
Example Sentences:
(1) A young man being treated with primary adjuvant Adriamycin and DDP for osteogenic sarcoma is described who developed a gingival line which temporally was related to DDP administration.
(2) Autopsy revealed a primary intimal sarcoma with osteogenic elements arising in the posterior leaflet of the pulmonary valve and obstructing the main pulmonary artery and its right branch.
(3) Plaster of Paris, a biocompatible, degradable ceramic material prepared from CaSO4, may have an osteogenic property and become an alternative implant material for ear surgery.
(4) Human T cell clones cytotoxic for autologous sarcoma cell lines have been developed from patient JM with an osteogenic sarcoma, and from patients EG and RM with malignant fibrohistiocytoma.
(5) We have studied the expression of genes that typify osteogenic differentiation in mandibular condyles during in vitro cultivation.
(6) The antiserum reacted at a lower titer with the Jijoye and EB-3 lines of Burkitt's lymphoma, the RPMI 4098 cell line of normal human lymphocytes, and culture lines of human melanoma and osteogenic sarcoma than with the RPMI 8226 cells or bone marrow from certain patients having multiple myeloma.
(7) The modern corticotomy has evolved from the initial open osteotomies, which eventually proved to be traumatic to bone's osteogenic elements, and closed bone osteoclasis, which proved time consuming and difficult to control.
(8) However, all three antibodies fail to react with the cell surface of osteoblasts or osteocytes, suggesting that the antigens recognized by these antibodies are developmentally regulated and specific for primitive or early-stage cells of the osteogenic lineage.
(9) The six patients had normal hemoglobin levels and the serum concentration of the following urinary constituents was normal in most of the patients: albumin, carotene, 25-hydroxycalciferol, parathyroid hormone, calcitonin, calcium, phosphorous, osteogenous alkaline phosphatase, cholesterol, triglycerides, and serum lipoproteins.
(10) The osteogenic effect of CF3OF was confirmed by the histopathological examination of the skeletal tissues.
(11) Radioimmunoassay was used in 46 cases of osteogenic sarcoma to assess prostaglandin E (PgE) levels in tumor tissue.
(12) Cells-precursors of haemopoietic microenvironment, as well as osteogenic cells-precursors, indicated with heterotopic transplantation of mouse bone marrow, can repair sublethal radiation damages.
(13) Fracture repair proceeds by an osteogenic reaction from both periosteum and marrow.
(14) In patients with osteogenic sarcoma preoperative irradiation was not found to be of value.
(15) Bone-seeking radionuclides administered to mice lead to skeletal tumours: (a) osteosarcomata, which are commonly radio-opaque to a variable degree owing to calcified tumour bone, but which may be osteolytic, (b) primitive mesenchymal (angio-) sarcomata which are non-osteogenic and osteolytic, (c) fibrosarcomata--which also are osteolytic--and to local or general lymphomata from irradiation of parental cells in bone marrow, but no special radiological features have been found associated with these last-named tumours.
(16) The additive or synergistic contribution of these BMP-2-related molecules to the osteogenic activity associated with demineralized bone is strongly implicated by the presence of these growth factors in the most active fractions of highly purified bone extract.
(17) The occurrence of pulmonary metastases in patients suffering from primary classic osteogenic sarcoma is compared among two groups of patients treated according to different protocols at Groote Schuur Hospital.
(18) We describe a 16-year-old girl with osteogenic sarcoma whose therapy was significantly complicated by multiple relapses of CDAD.
(19) Complete response and long-term remission, with local control rates between 50% and 70%, have been reported in a number of very large osteogenic sarcomas, soft-tissue sarcomas (particularly neurogenic tumors), melanomas, and adenocarcinomas of the alimentary tract.
(20) Bone grafts are often required but cannot ensure the incoming osteogenic fixation of the implant.