RT Journal A1 HIRSCH EF, MORGAN RH T1 CAusal significance to traumatic ossification of the fibrocartilage in tendon insertions JF Archives of Surgery JO Archives of Surgery YR 1939 FD November 1 VO 39 IS 5 SP 824 OP 837 DO 10.1001/archsurg.1939.01200170135012 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1939.01200170135012 AB Growths of bone tissue in muscles and in their tendinous insertions after trauma, in muscle tissue about joints after dislocations or in soft tissues about a simple fracture of a bone or after a minor injury commonly are given such designations as traumatic myositis ossificans, parosteal callus or some other appropriately descriptive term. Summaries of the data on such growths have been written by Fay,1 Painter,2 Lewis,3 Carey,4 Gruca,5 von Dittrich,6 Goto,7 Geschickter8 and others. All these reviews have emphasized trauma as the initiating factor. No age group is immune, but the incidence is greatest in young men. Fay stated that this indicates merely the frequency of trauma in a group leading an active life. The usual sites of these traumatic osseous growths are those exposed to injury in occupation, avocation or accident. According to Cahier,9 three fifths of the bone