- and cytokines. Calcitonin, a
hormone of
thyroid gland,
suppresses the
osteoclastic activity. The
osteoclasts do not have
receptors for
parathyroid hormone...
-
Gruber HE,
Lachman R (1993). "New
epiphyseal stippling syndrome with
osteoclastic hyperplasia". Am J Med Genet. 45 (5): 558–61. doi:10.1002/ajmg.1320450506...
-
osseous healing like
other bones.
Osteoclastic and
osteoblastic activity occurs after the
first w****,
hyperemia and
osteoclastic activity are seen on the necrotic...
- A non-ossifying
fibroma (NOF) is a
benign bone
tumor of the
osteoclastic,
giant cell-rich
tumor type. It
generally occurs in the
metaphysis of long bones...
-
significantly greater blood flow. The
resulting hyperemia leads to
increased osteoclastic resorption of bone, and this, in
concert with
mechanical stress, leads...
-
pathogenesis of Paget's
disease is
described in four stages:
Osteoclastic activity Mixed osteoclastic –
osteoblastic activity Osteoblastic activity Malignant...
-
unmetabolized in
urine and is a
specific marker of bone
resorption and
osteoclastic activity. It is
measured in
urine tests and is used
along with other...
- to
advance with age.
Degrees of
cherubism vary from mild to severe.
Osteoclastic and
osteoblastic remodeling contributes to the
change of
normal bone...
- senescence, degeneration/necrosis,
apoptosis (programmed cell death), and/or
osteoclastic engulfment. The
percentage of dead
osteocytes in bone
increases with...
-
activity of osteoclasts,
cells that
break down bone, in a
process known as
osteoclastic bone resorption. The
hyperparathyroidism can be
triggered by a parathyroid...