Orthop J Sports Med
September 2022
Background: Several studies have reported excellent results after surgical repair of proximal hamstring avulsions. However, the effect on these patients of receiving workers' compensation has not yet been explored.
Hypothesis: Workers' compensation patients undergoing proximal hamstring repair of complete tears will have similar outcomes when compared with a matched control group of non-workers' compensation patients.
Background: The ability to return to school after orthopaedic surgery is an important consideration for young patients, as there is substantial literature indicating that school attendance is correlated strongly with academic performance.
Purpose: To evaluate the time to return to school, the barriers that students encounter when returning to school, and the academic effect of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) in high school (HS) and college students.
Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2.
Background: Articular cartilage pathology can result from a spectrum of origins, including trauma, osteochondritis dissecans, avascular necrosis, or degenerative joint disease.
Purpose: To compare the differences in clinical and patient-reported outcomes after autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) versus osteochondral allograft transplantation (OCA) in patients with focal articular cartilage defects without underlying bone loss.
Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3.
Background: Several cadaveric imaging studies have demonstrated that the articular cartilage thickness on the tibial plateau varies depending on coverage by native meniscal tissue. These differences are thought to partially contribute to the rates of cartilage degeneration and development of osteoarthritis after meniscectomy. Because there is greater tibial plateau coverage with meniscal tissue in the setting of a discoid meniscus, these findings may also have implications for the long-term health of the knee after saucerization of a torn discoid meniscus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To compare the measurements of the Caton-Deschamps index on preoperative magnetic resonance imaging and radiographs of patients undergoing operative management of patellar instability.
Methods: Patients who underwent primary medial patellofemoral ligament reconstruction and/or tibial tubercle osteotomy between January 2015 and November 2019 were assessed. Caton-Deschamps indices were measured by 3 independent reviewers on both radiographs and magnetic resonance imaging.
Diabetes increases the risk of developing postoperative complications such as superficial and deep infection, wound dehiscence, and revisional surgery. Prolonged non-weightbearing and/or augmented fixation may reduce postoperative complications in complicated diabetic ankle fractures. This study's purpose was to compare the development of postoperative infection, wound dehiscence, and revisional surgery in complicated diabetic ankle fractures with respect to weightbearing status.
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