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1 versus other oral analgesic agents for acute soft tissue injury.
2 ion of intubation, suggestive of progressive soft tissue injury.
3 n caring for the critically ill patient with soft tissue injuries.
4 on of possible bone fracture, bone edema and soft tissue injuries.
5 features, femoral distal cam, and associated soft-tissue injuries.
6 s (27.9 vs. 13.3 months; p = 0.009) and more soft tissue injuries (19 [56%] vs. 9 [26%]; p = 0.03).
8 All requiring primary amputations had severe soft tissue injury and three had posterior tibial nerve
10 ith the combined insult (i.e., bone fracture/soft-tissue injury and hemorrhage) than after bone injur
11 ficantly correlated with musculoskeletal and soft tissue injuries, as well as being struck by objects
12 neurologic deficit; anisocoria; lateral neck soft tissue injury; clinical suspicion) underwent both C
13 ic diagnoses, namely, fractures and bone and soft-tissue injuries (Department of Defense and Californ
16 fections were more common in blast injuries, soft tissue injuries, >3 wound sites, loss of limb, abdo
17 l spine MR studies were obtained to evaluate soft-tissue injuries in 366 obtunded patients with blunt
18 ny MR examinations were performed to exclude soft-tissue injuries in the cervical spine of obtunded p
19 tween indoor positioning facing the port and soft tissue injury incidence, and with proximity to wind
21 ractures involving the foramen lacerum, neck soft tissue injury, or neurological abnormalities unexpl
22 the incidence of infectious complications of soft-tissue injuries, particularly those involving fract
25 ng World War I in the treatment of extensive soft-tissue injuries proved invaluable in reducing infec