Publications by authors named "Grace Welch"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aims to compare long-term patient-reported outcomes between two arthroscopic biceps tenodesis techniques (inlay and onlay) performed during rotator cuff repair, with a focus on outcomes after at least 2 years.
  • Researchers conducted a retrospective chart review of 165 patients to evaluate symptoms related to the biceps and assess complication rates, including pain, deformities, and the impact of rotator cuff tear sizes.
  • Results showed no significant differences in complication rates or pain scores between the two techniques, with 10% of inlay patients experiencing biceps pain compared to 3% in the onlay group.
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Background: The use of total shoulder arthroplasty is continuing to rise with its expanding indications. For patients with chronic conditions, such as glenohumeral arthritis and rotator cuff arthropathy, nonoperative treatment is typically done prior to arthroplasty and often includes corticosteroid injections (CSIs). Recent studies in the shoulder arthroplasty literature as well as applied from the hip and knee literature have focused on the risk of periprosthetic infection.

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Background: Prior investigations have utilized various surrogate markers of socioeconomic status to assess how health care disparities impact outcomes after rotator cuff repair (RCR). When taken as individual markers, these factors have inconsistent associations. Medicaid insurance status is an accessible marker that has recently been correlated with less optimal outcomes after RCR.

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Background: Recent decades have seen an exponential rise in global obesity prevalence, with rates nearly doubling in a span of 40 years. A comprehensive knowledge base regarding the systemic effects of obesity is required to create new preventative and therapeutic agents effective at combating the current obesity epidemic. Previous studies of diet-induced obesity utilizing mouse models have demonstrated a difference in bodyweight gain by sex.

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Background: Recent decades have seen an exponential rise in global obesity prevalence, with rates nearly doubling in a span of forty years. A comprehensive knowledge base regarding the systemic effects of obesity is required to create new preventative and therapeutic agents effective at combating the current obesity epidemic. Previous studies of diet-induced obesity utilizing mouse models have demonstrated a difference in bodyweight gain by sex.

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