Bursa (anatomy) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A bursa (plural bursae or bursas ; Latin: ) is a small fluid-filled sac lined by synovial membrane with an inner capillary layer of slimy fluid (similar to that of an egg white). It provides a c...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bursa_(anatomy)
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What is a bursa?; A bursa is a thin sack filled with the body's own natural lubricating fluid. This slippery sack allows different tissues such as muscle, tendon, and skin slide over bony surfaces without catching.
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orthopedics.about.com/cs/patelladisorders/a/kneebursiti...
orthopedics.about.com/cs/patelladisorders/a/kneebursitis.htm
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Topics: askville bonus, bursa sack ... Find similar questions: long bursa sack injury infection player ... "What is the standard recovery time for a bursa sack removal operation?" (1 answer)
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bursa sack topic page. Askville's bursa sack community page contains questions, answers and people interested in bursa sack.
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askville.amazon.com/bursa-sack/Topic.do?tag=bursa+sack
askville.amazon.com/bursa-sack/Topic.do?tag=bursa+sack
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The hip joint and the large muscles that cover it are protected by five large "bursae" (cushions) and lubricated by synovial fluid contained in the hip joint. Each bursa is a sack that contains lubricating fluid and functions to reduce pressure and friction around the joint.
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www.arthritis-treatment-and-relief.com/physical-therapy...
www.arthritis-treatment-and-relief.com/physical-therapy-for-hip-pain.html
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Surgery is sometimes necessary to remove a thickened bursa that has not improved with other treatments and the swollen sac is restricting your activities. To remove the pre-patellar bursa sack, an incision is made over the top of the knee.
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knee1.com/Education_Center/Therapies/Bursa_Sack_Removal
knee1.com/Education_Center/Therapies/Bursa_Sack_Removal
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Bursitis of the Elbow - Pain behind the elbow ... The elbow contains a slippery, fluid filled sack called the bursa to help the skin slide over the bone in that area. The olecranon bursa, covers the olecranon process (the extension of the ulna that fits into the humerous).
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sportsmedicine.about.com/cs/elbow/a/elbow4.htm
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Bursitis is an irritation of a fluid-filled sac on top of your knee. ... However, sometimes this sack of fluid becomes inflamed from either an injury (such as a direct blow to the knee), overuse (such as kneeling to scrub floors) or infection. When the bursa becomes inflamed, doctors add the ending "itis" meaning inflammation.
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www.jointhealing.com/pages/knee/knee_bursitis.html
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: I have a large bursa sac on my elbow that has been there for about 2 weeks..it hasn't gone down, in fact it has gotten larger..I have an old injury from hockey that has some bone chips in the elbow...will this mend on it's own or should it be treated and what's the treatment and will this return...
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www.orthopedicquestions.com/mes-pt/1660.html
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