コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ural pain response and midterm outcome after vertebroplasty.
2 vertebral body, and utility of prophylactic vertebroplasty.
3 predictor of midterm clinical outcome after vertebroplasty.
4 steoporotic VCFs of patients who present for vertebroplasty.
5 rranted to assess the efficacy and safety of vertebroplasty.
6 ng (ADL) (five-point scale) before and after vertebroplasty.
7 n clinical outcome from that of bipediculate vertebroplasty.
8 yperbaric oxygen therapy and the highest for vertebroplasty.
9 ergoing prophylactic spinal stabilization or vertebroplasty.
11 Of 177 patients treated with percutaneous vertebroplasty, 22 (12.4%) developed a total of 36 new v
12 se in wedge angle with kyphoplasty than with vertebroplasty (3.1 degrees vs 1.6 degrees, respectively
13 eight was greater with kyphoplasty than with vertebroplasty (5.1 mm vs 2.3 mm, respectively; P < .05)
15 of a unipediculate approach in percutaneous vertebroplasty allows filling of both vertebral halves f
18 rtebral augmentation (VA), defined as either vertebroplasty and/or balloon kyphoplasty (BKP), is a mi
19 ereotactic radiosurgery, separation surgery, vertebroplasty, and minimally invasive local ablative ap
20 , number of fractures, time from fracture to vertebroplasty, and time from vertebroplasty to question
21 f vertebral fractures with percutaneous PMMA vertebroplasty appears to be safe and results in substan
22 te of evidence in support of the efficacy of vertebroplasty are discussed, with particular attention
24 ed from plastic or aluminum were used during vertebroplasty at 172 levels in 86 patient-treatment ses
26 use) scores were monitored before and after vertebroplasty at specified intervals following treatmen
27 e, 76 years) who underwent percutaneous PMMA vertebroplasty between 1996 and 1999, 245 were successfu
29 had substantially impaired ambulation before vertebroplasty compared with 28% afterward (P <.001).
32 or, were studied; two operators had previous vertebroplasty experience and five were neurointerventio
33 gs in 177 patients treated with percutaneous vertebroplasty for more than 2 years were reviewed retro
34 patients undergoing first-time, single-level vertebroplasty for osteoporotic or traumatic compression
35 of low-value knee arthroscopic debridement, vertebroplasty for osteoporotic spinal fractures, hyperb
36 scopic debridement for osteoarthritis; 2520, vertebroplasty for osteoporotic spinal fractures; 162 28
40 e hundred thirty-one participants (68 in the vertebroplasty group and 63 in the control group) were i
41 re was no significant difference between the vertebroplasty group and the control group in either the
45 is review, aimed at current practitioners of vertebroplasty, highlights recent changes in patient wor
46 ed four-view radiographs obtained during 363 vertebroplasties in 181 treatment sessions in 152 patien
47 ty increased vertebral body height more than vertebroplasty in this model of acutely created fracture
48 on bone consolidation, includes osteoplasty/vertebroplasty, in which polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA)
50 including risk of subsequent fracture after vertebroplasty, long-term outcome of cement in the verte
53 d to be treated with kyphoplasty (n = 19) or vertebroplasty (n = 18) and were then imaged at multi-de
54 board-approved trial and were randomized to vertebroplasty (n = 68) or control intervention (n = 63)
56 bral compression fractures to undergo either vertebroplasty or a simulated procedure without cement (
57 patients guessed their treatment allocation (vertebroplasty or control) with a forced-choice response
62 Background Evidence regarding percutaneous vertebroplasty (PV) for chronic painful osteoporotic ver
66 new fractures after undergoing percutaneous vertebroplasty; two-thirds of these new fractures occur
67 een patients who guessed their treatment was vertebroplasty versus those who guessed their treatment
68 patient age and sex, date of treatment with vertebroplasty, vertebral level(s) treated, pedicular ap
72 mpression fractures in patients treated with vertebroplasty were similar to the improvements in a con
73 <10), particularly for knee arthroscopy and vertebroplasty, with higher numerical rates of low-value
74 kyphoplasty provided mortality benefits over vertebroplasty, with HRs of 0.77 (95% CI: 0.77, 0.78; P