Bone New Open
The four chief kinds of bones are long, short, level and unpredictable. Bones that are longer than they are wide are called long bones. The fourth bone is your little patella, which is also called the kneecap. Your femur, or thighbone, is the biggest bone in your body. The leader of your femur fits into your hip attachment and the base end associates with your knee. The two bones underneath your knee that make up your shin are your tibia and fibula. What's the littlest bone in the human body? Helpfully, that would be the stapes. It is one of three minuscule bones in the center ear that pass on sound from the external ear to the internal ear. On the whole called the ossicles, these bones are independently known as the malleus, incus, and stapes. There are level bones in the skull (occipital, parietal, frontal, nasal, lacrimal, and vomer), the thoracic enclosure (sternum and ribs), and the pelvis (ilium, ischium, and pubis). The capacity of level bkones is to secure inside organs, for example, the cerebrum, heart, and pelvic organs. Level bones are comprised of a layer of light bone between two dainty layers of conservative bone. They have a level shape, not adjusted. Models incorporate the skull and rib bones. Level bones have marrow, however they don't have a bone marrow de
High Impact List of Articles
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Technical and procedural advances in percutaneous coronary intervention for chronic total occlusion
T Muramatsu
Perspective: Interventional Cardiology
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Technical and procedural advances in percutaneous coronary intervention for chronic total occlusion
T Muramatsu
Perspective: Interventional Cardiology
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Drug-coated balloons: a novel advance in the percutaneous treatment of coronary and peripheral artery disease
CL Chow, P Scott, O Farouque & DJ Clark
Review Article: Interventional Cardiology
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Drug-coated balloons: a novel advance in the percutaneous treatment of coronary and peripheral artery disease
CL Chow, P Scott, O Farouque & DJ Clark
Review Article: Interventional Cardiology
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An update on bioresorbable vascular scaffolds: from lesion preparation, deployment and beyond
JR Costa Jr & A Abizaid
Review Article: Interventional Cardiology
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An update on bioresorbable vascular scaffolds: from lesion preparation, deployment and beyond
JR Costa Jr & A Abizaid
Review Article: Interventional Cardiology
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News in Interventional Cardiology-5 (2012)
News and Views: Interventional Cardiology
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News in Interventional Cardiology-5 (2012)
News and Views: Interventional Cardiology
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Potential use of 99mTc‑annexin V imaging in ischemically damaged myocardium
J Taki, I Matsunari, H Wakabayashi, A Inaki & S Kinuya
Editorial: Interventional Cardiology
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Potential use of 99mTc‑annexin V imaging in ischemically damaged myocardium
J Taki, I Matsunari, H Wakabayashi, A Inaki & S Kinuya
Editorial: Interventional Cardiology
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Recanalization of infrapopliteal occlusions
WD Adair & A Bolia
Review Article: Interventional Cardiology
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Recanalization of infrapopliteal occlusions
WD Adair & A Bolia
Review Article: Interventional Cardiology
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