Orthopedics Today Current Issue
The following articles appeared in the print edition of Orthopedics Today.
Table of Contents
- At Issue: Most efficient bunion treatments
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- Chondroitin may positively affect osteoarthritic subchondral bone Johanne Martel-Pelletier, PhD
- Chondroitin sulfate combo effective in moderate-to-severe pain
- Chondroitin sulfate possesses novel mechanisms of action Patrick du Souich, MD, PhD
- Chondroitin sulfate provides joint space width stabilization Beat A. Michel, MD
- Clinical trials build evidence for chondroitin efficacy in osteoarthritis Daniel Uebelhart, MD
- Controlling implant costs
- Different analyses measure chondroitin pharmacokinetics Nicola Volpi, BSc, Biol
- Health care spending expected to outpace U.S. economy in next decade
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- Help wanted in 2030: TJR needs will soar, severe surgeon shortage possible
- Ironman competitors push at fitness boundaries
- Kappa Deltas Lanier award presented to renal cell carcinoma researchers
- Knee surgeons report increased tunnel accuracy with navigated ACL reconstruction
- More aggressive initial treatment regimen needed for pediatric MRSA patients
- New Jersey court says class action Vioxx lawsuit should proceed
- Patellofemoral bracing, exercise effective for patients with patellar pain
- Pay-for-performance: What surgeons, hospitals and stakeholders need to know
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- Pennsylvania governor vetoes joint and several liability bill; Florida approves it
- Pre-cooling acetabular liners helps make snapping into shells easier
- Spine surgery position may increase risk for postop vision loss
- Surgeons debate best graft option for anterior discectomy and fusion
- Surgeons detail anatomic reconstruction of the coracoclavicular ligaments John-Erik Bell, MD; Augustus D. Mazzocca, MD; William N. Levine, MD
- Surgeons quantify stability with new cervical spine injury classification system
- Target markets based on clinical challenges make marketing easy
- TKR soft tissue balancing drives new interest in navigation
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- The business of orthopedics
- Hardware removal is always ’more difficult than expected,’ especially in children Douglas W. Jackson, MD