Publications by authors named "F B Fondren"

In this study we compared the influence that the order of the performance of different velocity exercise progressions has on average muscle power and total work production during a velocity spectrum isokinetic training session. Twenty-two college students were assigned randomly to four exercise trials, each containing an isokinetic exercise training session involving dominant knee extensors and flexors. Each exercise trial consisted of two sets of ten repetitions at speeds of 30 degrees , 90 degrees , 150 degrees , and 210 degrees /sec.

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We studied the results in forty-seven knees in thirty-seven patients - ten male and twenty-seven female - who had recurrent dislocation of the patella and were treated by a modified Roux-Goldthwait procedure (lateral retinacular release, medial transfer of the lateral patellar tendon without advancement, plication of the medial retinaculum, and advancement of the vastus medialis). Ten of the female patients had bilateral dislocation. The results were analyzed after follow-ups ranging from 3.

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Conventional radiographic assessment of the patellofemoral joint (PFJ) is often unsatisfactory for a variety of technical and theoretical reasons. Using a simple device designed to allow easy and reproducible control of knee flexion, we used computed tomography (CT) to evaluate the PFJ in 10 normal volunteers and five patients with a history suggestive of recurrent subluxation or dislocation of the PFJ. At full extension of the knee the patients with a history of malalignment showed an abnormal patellar centralization and tilt compared with those of the normal volunteers.

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Radiographic assessment of the patellofemoral joint (PFJ) is problematic because conventional views are cumbersome, difficult to standardize, and not reliable for displaying this joint with flexion of the knee less than about 30 degrees. We used computed tomography (CT) to obtain conveniently a direct transaxial view of the PFJ in ten normal human volunteers at different 0 degree, 20 degrees, and 45 degrees of knee flexion and during both contraction and relaxation of the quadriceps muscle. From the CT images we measured femoral trochlear angle, patellar centralization, femoral trochlear depth, and patella tilt angle.

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