Publications by authors named "A W Yasko"

Surgical strategies for the primary tumor for patients with extremity and pelvis osteosarcoma have evolved from the ablative to limb-sparing approaches over the past three decades. Favorable oncologic and functional outcomes with contemporary tissue-conserving techniques consistently observed in skeletally mature patients have prompted the application of similar approaches to a growing number of eligible skeletally immature patients. In response to emerging long-term outcome data, current strategies have focused principally on refining the nature and scope of surgical resection to preserve uninvolved tissues, and on the adoption of novel biological and nonbiological skeletal and soft-tissue reconstruction methods to optimize function.

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Background: Allograft-prosthetic composite reconstruction of the proximal part of the tibia is one option following resection of a skeletal tumor. Previous studies with use of this technique have found a high prevalence of complications, including fracture, infection, extensor mechanism insufficiency, and loosening. To address some of these problems, we adopted certain measures, including muscle flap coverage, meticulous tendon reconstruction, rigid implant fixation, and careful rehabilitation.

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Background: The anatomy of the shoulder poses special challenges with regard to limb-sparing surgery. Resection of the deltoid muscle is considered by some surgeons to be necessary to achieve adequate margins for osteosarcoma of the proximal humerus. However, this can compromise the functional results after reconstruction of the shoulder.

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