What's the difference between tarsus and tibia?

Tarsus


Definition:

  • (n.) The ankle; the bones or cartilages of the part of the foot between the metatarsus and the leg, consisting in man of seven short bones.
  • (n.) A plate of dense connective tissue or cartilage in the eyelid of man and many animals; -- called also tarsal cartilage, and tarsal plate.
  • (n.) The foot of an insect or a crustacean. It usually consists of form two to five joints.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The basis for this migration is postulated to be the anatomical relationships of the tarsus, postorbicular fascia, and lower eyelid retractors.
  • (2) The staining was most often concentrated centrally or in the middle anterior part of the superior tarsus.
  • (3) In all cases the tarsus was replaced by a strip of dura mater, the eye-lid skin by a free retroauricular graft.
  • (4) Hard palate mucosa grafts are an excellent replacement for tarsus and conjunctiva in eyelid reconstruction.
  • (5) Reconstruction of full thickness eyelid defects requires the correction of both posterior lamella (tarsus, conjunctiva) and anterior lamella (skin, muscle).
  • (6) This article reports the technique and results of a modified operation that uses two silicone rods per upper eyelid and eliminates fixation sutures to tarsus inferiorly and frontalis muscle superiorly.
  • (7) Attention is called to the necessity of the complete healing of the injuries of the ligaments and to the prevention of the valgus tendency of the tarsus.
  • (8) These reflex effects should enhance the traction of the tarsus with the ground.
  • (9) A concurrent infection of the patient's left tarsus was treated by triple arthrodesis.
  • (10) The attachment to the tarsus of the advanced aponeurosis 2 to 3 mm from the ciliary border gives the surgeon a leeway of approximately 7 to 8 mm to recess in the event of an overcorrection.
  • (11) The shortened tarsus improves the apposition of the lid aagainst the globe and the tightened orbicularis aids in maintaining this stability.
  • (12) The use of modified full-thickness grafts is superior to other well-known techniques, especially in cases with defects of the medial half of the lower lid and upper lid defects, up to and including total upper lid loss, even if the tarsus in the grafts is subject to regressive changes and the lashes are usually lost.
  • (13) The success of the procedure is determined by suture of the tarsus directly to the orbital periosteum.
  • (14) A nuclear magnetic resonance tomogram of an isolated equine tarsus is presented for comparison method.
  • (15) A young llama evaluated for bilateral hind limb lameness was found to have cranially rotated tibial tarsal bones as well as bilateral carpus and tarsus valgus and a ventricular septal defect.
  • (16) A 12-year-old Domestic Shorthair cat with a soft, fluctuant, subcutaneous mass, approximately 5 cm in diameter on the posterior aspect of the left tarsus was diagnosed as having protothecosis.
  • (17) A synovial cell sarcoma of the tarsus in a 6-year-old dog was treated with doxorubicin HCl and cyclophosphamide.
  • (18) The temperatures which populations of mechanosensory hairs on the thorax, head and tarsus experienced were measured in freely moving animals.
  • (19) The authors have observed 135 dislocations of the tarsus in leprosic feet.
  • (20) Laxity of the tarsus and canthal ligaments benefit from a horizontal lid-shortening procedure.

Tibia


Definition:

  • (n.) The inner, or preaxial, and usually the larger, of the two bones of the leg or hind limb below the knee.
  • (n.) The fourth joint of the leg of an insect. See Illust. under Coleoptera, and under Hexapoda.
  • (n.) A musical instrument of the flute kind, originally made of the leg bone of an animal.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Five cases of mycetoma of bone involving patella, shaft of tibia, medial malleolus, calcaneum and phalanx of great toe are presented.
  • (2) Limb abnormalities included lumbar scoliosis, short malformed tibias and fibulas, and polydactyly.
  • (3) The crus has been elongation 8 cm by Ilizarov method in 9 years old boy and 5 cm elongation of the tibia has been achieved with the use of Bastiani method in 8 years old girl.
  • (4) We report a case of popliteal vein obstruction by an osteochondroma, arising from the proximal tibia, in which the diagnosis was initially missed.
  • (5) The patient described in this report has the classic findings of Bardet-Biedl syndrome in conjunction with tibia vara and irregular physes of the lower extremities.
  • (6) Two cases of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia treated by direct current stimulation are presented.
  • (7) In the control group, only the plates of A-W GC were implanted in the bilateral tibiae of 20 rabbits.
  • (8) The fetal tibia is found to be growing more intensively at its distal end.
  • (9) Accurate rotational osteotomy is especially difficult in a triangular bone such as the tibia.
  • (10) We successfully applied it in the treatment of eight fractures of the shafts of the femur or tibia which would not unite because of infection, soft tissue interposition or gross incongruity of fragments.
  • (11) In the periosteum of the human tibia, the arterial blood supply shows a general sectorial angioarchitecture.
  • (12) Restraint produced regional losses of bone most obviously in the proximal tibia.
  • (13) Collagen fibrillogenesis was studied in tibiae of chick embryos, 9, 11, and 14 days old.
  • (14) Thereafter an account is given of development and morphology of the tibia with dyschondroplastic lesions (retained cartilages).
  • (15) We tested the effects of 1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25-(OH)2D3), 2 beta-(3-hydroxypropoxy)-1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (ED-71) and dexamethasone on osteocalcin mRNA levels in rat tibiae in vivo.
  • (16) The knee model is based upon a four-bar linkage comprising the femur, tibia and two cruciate ligaments.
  • (17) The right tibia received Simplex particulate cement polymer and the left leg functioned as a prepared, but nonimplanted, control.
  • (18) By means of 51-Cr labeled red cells and 59-Fe labeled resin particles, the blood volume and blood flow rate in the tibiae were calculated simultaneously as a percentage of the values in the contralateral tibiae.
  • (19) In all cases, the results were bigger for measurements in the laboratory coordinate system compared with the tibia coordinate system, because the movement of the lower leg was included in the measurements in the laboratory coordinate system.
  • (20) The resulting fraction was homogeneous, active in the rat tibia bioassay and had a similar isoelectric point, molecular weight and amino acid composition to mammalian growth hormone.

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