Ankylosing Spondylitis: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

Ankylosing spondylitis, also known as ankylosing spondylitis or ankylosing spondylitis, is a rheumatic disease with a chronic course. Ankylosing spondylitis mostly affects the joints, specifically the spinal joints. What is ankylosing spondylitis? Ankylosing spondylitis, or ankylosing spondylitis’ and ankylosing spondylitis, is a chronic inflammatory rheumatic disease that mainly affects the joints. It primarily affects the … Ankylosing Spondylitis: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

Dysmelia: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

Dysmelia can take various forms. According to the form of the malformation, appropriate therapeutic measures are usually based on the individual. What is dysmelia? Dysmelia is a malformation that affects the limbs (legs, arms, hands, and/or arms). Malformations associated with dysmelia are already congenital. Depending on the affected person, the malformation can affect several limbs … Dysmelia: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

Schoenlein-Henoch Purpura: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

If a child or baby develops a fever with swelling of the extremities again after a flu-like infection or childhood illness has already resolved, Purpura Schoenlein-Henoch should be considered. This condition is also associated with pinpoint skin hemorrhages that sometimes look like blood blisters. What is purpura Schoenlein-Henoch disease? Purpura Schoenlein-Henoch is an inflammatory disease … Schoenlein-Henoch Purpura: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

Necrosis: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

The term necrosis, which comes from the Greek, describes the death of individual cells or cell clusters on a living organism, which can result in the death of tissue layers and eventually limbs. This contrasts with apoptosis, which is physiological cell death. What is necrosis? The pathological death of individual cells, tissues, or limbs is … Necrosis: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

The TFCC lesion

Definition The TFCC (triangular fibrocartilaginous complex) is a cartilage-like structure located in the wrist. The TFCC mainly forms the connection between the ulna and the first row of carpal bones. However, it is also partially located between the ends of the ulna and the radius and covers a small portion of the joint between the … The TFCC lesion