Hypermobility of Joints von P. Beighton | ISBN 9783540121138

Hypermobility of Joints

von P. Beighton, R. Grahame und H. Bird, Vorwort von E. Bywaters
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinP. Beighton
Vorwort vonE. Bywaters
Autor / AutorinR. Grahame
Autor / AutorinH. Bird
Buchcover Hypermobility of Joints | P. Beighton | EAN 9783540121138 | ISBN 3-540-12113-7 | ISBN 978-3-540-12113-8
From the reviews of the first edition: „This little book deals with a somewhat neglected subject and will prove useful in a number of ways.“ British Journal of Plastic Surgery #1 „This is a delightful book full of stimulating ideas, by three authors who have pooled their thoughts and the results of their studies.“ Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine #2

Hypermobility of Joints

von P. Beighton, R. Grahame und H. Bird, Vorwort von E. Bywaters
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinP. Beighton
Vorwort vonE. Bywaters
Autor / AutorinR. Grahame
Autor / AutorinH. Bird
Although those of us (and particularly orthopaedists and rheumatologists) who deal with locomotor diseases in man are concerned mainly with stiffness and limitation of movement affecting not only livelihood but also the quality of life-from time to time we see patients suffering from too much of a good thing, whose joints are too freely mobile for the good of the whole man. In most instances, at least in youth, the benefit outweighs the debit. Many hypermobile people in the performing world ballet dancers, circus gymnasts, musicians and sportsmen and women-have delighted audiences over 20 centuries with their unusual ability, prowess and postures. Some types of acquired hypermobility can, however, be disadvantageous, an example being tabes dorsalis with its flaccid joints and perhaps pain as well. In a similar way the restored-to-normal mobility of treated rheumatoid patients (whether by prednisone or longer term drugs such as penicillamine or gold) must be considered abnormal-as hypermobility for that patient which in the long term may hasten secondary arthrotic changes. This treatise deals, however, with the abnormally mobile, either as an effect of inherited connective tissue abnormality or as one end of the normal range of mobility, without any obvious connective tissue change. It comes at a fecund time in our knowledge of the intricacies of the collagen molecule, with intriguing questions concerning the development of local type specific structures. The fibroblast may yet expand to the same diversity as the once humble lymphocyte.