2 results match your criteria: "Meram Medical School University of Selcuk[Affiliation]"

The concomitant presence of two anomalous muscles in the forearm.

Hand (N Y)

September 2007

Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology and Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Meram Medical School University of Selcuk, Konya, Turkey.

This article describes the concomitant presence of two anomalous forearm muscles in a 20-year-old man, discovered accidentally during an operation for a forearm injury. The first one was similar to a reverse palmaris longus muscle except for its direction to the Guyon's canal. The second one originated from the radial antebrachial fascia, superficial to all other forearm muscles in the lower half of the forearm, then diverged medially and extended into the Guyon's canal and was innervated by the ulnar nerve.

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Purpose: To determine the usefulness of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in detecting the tendinous connection in Linburg-Comstock anomaly.

Material And Methods: The study comprised 52 patients attending the orthopedic clinic for different hand problems. They were also examined for the presence of Linburg-Comstock anomaly, which was present in nine, and these patients were examined by MRI.

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