Drew D. Moore
Oakland University
14 Papers
37 Citations
Drew D. Moore is an academic researcher from Oakland University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Sarcoma. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications. Previous affiliations of Drew D. Moore include University of Chicago & Beaumont Health.
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Papers
Fretting and Corrosion Damage of Retrieved Dual-Mobility Total Hip Arthroplasty Systems.
Daniel J. Lombardo,Matthew P. Siljander,Corinn K. Gehrke,Drew D. Moore,Mark S Karadsheh,Erin A. Baker +5 more
TL;DR: Findings demonstrate that dual-mobility total hip arthroplasty systems may be susceptible to the same fretting and corrosion damage observed in traditional modular THA systems.
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Ewing’s Sarcoma of Bone
Drew D. Moore,Rex C. Haydon +1 more
TL;DR: Survival has improved to the 55-75% range in those patients who present without known metastases and current research aims to continue this improvement by looking further into the associated gene abnormalities and possibly targeted therapies.
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Imaging Diagnosis of Solitary Tumors of the Phalanges and Metacarpals of the Hand.
TL;DR: Imaging, including both radiography and cross-sectional imaging, can allow the radiologist to generate a clinically useful differential diagnosis based on the distinguishing features of these entities.
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Does Taper Design Affect Taper Fretting Corrosion in Ceramic-on-Polyethylene Total Hip Arthroplasty? A Retrieval Analysis.
Matthew P. Siljander,Corinn K. Gehrke,Samantha D. Wheeler,Ali H. Sobh,Drew D. Moore,Michael A. Flierl,Erin A. Baker +6 more
TL;DR: Differences in taper design characteristics may lead to greater micromotion at the taper-head interface, leading to increased fretting and corrosion in CoP THA implants.
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Osteoma of long bone: an expanding spectrum of imaging findings
TL;DR: The 45-year-old female in this case presented with left hip fullness and was subsequently found to have a proximal femoral osteoma, which was unique in that it contained large fatty marrow spaces that corresponded to bands of relatively low density on plain radiography and computed tomography, giving it a heterogeneous appearance atypical of osteoma of long bone.
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