ADDRESSES AND ORIGINAL ARTICLESTALIPES EQUINO-VARUS☆
References (12)
Orthopædic Surgery
(1919)Congenital Club-foot
(1930)Orthopædic Surgery
(1930)Orthopædic and Reconstructive Surgery
(1926)Surgery of Childhood
(1926)
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Cited by (18)
Sir Denis Browne: Contributions to pediatric urology
2010, Journal of Pediatric UrologyCitation Excerpt :His early orthopedic training in conjunction with his pediatric surgery experiences resulted in what was considered his most significant contribution to the pediatric surgery of his time. This was his theory of congenital deformities of mechanical origin, which covered many congenital orthopedic abnormalities, particularly talipes equino varus, from a fetal positioning perspective [7–10]. His basic theory was that most of these deformities were the result of molding of otherwise ‘perfect human specimens’.
Club foot
1987, Current OrthopaedicsON THE PATHOGENESIS OF CLUBFOOT
1985, The LancetPediatric orthopedic deformities, volume 2: Developmental disorders of the lower extremity: Hip to knee to ankle and foot
2019, Pediatric Orthopedic Deformities, Volume 2: Developmental Disorders of the Lower Extremity: Hip to Knee to Ankle and FootCongenital clubfoot. Classification, etiology, pathogenesis, the evolution of treatments (Literature review)
2014, Pediatric Traumatology, Orthopaedics and Reconstructive Surgery
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* An Arris and Gale lecture delivered before the Royal College of Surgeons of England on Feb. 13th, 1934.
Copyright © 1934 Published by Elsevier Ltd.