The American journal of sports medicine
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Treatment of lateral epicondylitis with platelet-rich plasma, glucocorticoid, or saline: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.
Lateral epicondylitis (LE) is a common musculoskeletal disorder for which an effective treatment strategy remains unknown. ⋯ Neither injection of PRP nor glucocorticoid was superior to saline with regard to pain reduction in LE at the primary end point at 3 months. However, injection of glucocorticoid had a short-term pain-reducing effect at 1 month in contrast to the other therapies. Injection of glucocorticoid in LE reduces both color Doppler activity and tendon thickness compared with PRP and saline.
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Comparative Study
Injury patterns at a large Western United States ski resort with and without snowboarders: the Taos experience.
Differences in injury patterns among alpine skiers and snowboarders have previously been recognized, and controversy remains about the safety implications that snowboarding may pose to a ski resort. A change of policy at Taos Ski Valley provides a unique and modern perspective on the effect that snowboarders have on ski resort injuries. ⋯ In this study, there was a small but statistically significant increase in the likelihood of injury with the addition of snowboarding to a large ski resort. It is likely that factors such as younger demographic, elevated risk-taking behavior, or increased mountain crowding are involved. The difference in injuries is largely because of a significant increase in distal radius fractures, closed head injuries, and acromioclavicular separations. On mountain safety precautions such as widening of runs and streamlining of high traffic areas, training medical providers to recognize and treat sport-specific injuries, and promoting the use of wrist guards and helmets may be useful in reducing the effect that snowboarders have on ski resort injuries.
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Osteochondral lesions (OCLs) of the talus are a common entity in sports orthopaedics. There are several operative techniques with a good outcome on follow-up examinations. However, limitations such as sacrificing healthy cartilage (osteochondral autograft transfer system [OATS], mosaicplasty), multiple-stage operative procedures (matrix-induced autologous chondrocyte transplantation [MACI], autologous chondrocyte implantation [ACI]), high costs (ACI, allograft), and limited availability (allograft) do remain and reflect potential drawbacks of the currently used techniques. ⋯ The modified AMIC procedure is safe for the treatment of OCLs in the ankle with overall good clinical and MRI results.
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Comparative Study
Preoperative MRI underestimates articular cartilage defect size compared with findings at arthroscopic knee surgery.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is widely used as a preoperative tool to estimate the size of articular cartilage defects to optimize treatment selection. However, the reliability of MRI sizing of cartilage defects is not well understood. Hypothesis/ ⋯ Magnetic resonance imaging underestimates the size of articular cartilage defects compared with final postdebridement size as measured during arthroscopic knee surgery. Thus, before arthroscopic surgery, orthopaedic surgeons should consider treatment strategies that are appropriate for a larger defect than predicted by preoperative MRI.
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Currently, no clinical midterm results have been reported on arthroscopically assisted reduction of the acutely dislocated acromioclavicular (AC) joint using suture-button devices for fixation. ⋯ Arthroscopically assisted reduction of the acutely dislocated AC joint provides satisfactory clinical results 58 months after surgery. Compared with the baseline, all patients improved significantly. Two of 23 patients revealed an increased posterior dislocation compared with evaluation 24 months after surgery. No further migration of the clavicle or AC joint degeneration was observed.