Advertisement
Arthrofibrosis - course by Dr Frank Noyes
Submitted by admin on February 24, 2008 - 12:06pm.
Dr Frank Noyes of the Cincinnati Sportsmedicine and Orthopaedic Center in Cincinnati, Ohio brings you a structured course on the important subject of arthrofibrosis. Dr Noyes is one of the world's foremost knee surgeons, researcher and author of hundreds of leading publications of many many topics to do with the knee.
Part 1 - Arthrofibrosis - Introduction
- Defining Arthrofibrosis
- What makes the knee vulnerable to arthrofibrosis?
- How common is arthrofibrosis?
Part 2 - The knee - range of motion
- What is a normal range of motion?
- ROM required for activities of daily living
Part 3 - Arthrofibrosis - anatomic classification
- The articulating surfaces
- The extensor mechanism
- The infrapatellar fat pad
- Cruciate ligaments, femoral notch and menisci
- Flexion loss and the all-important soft tissue spaces
- Extension loss
Part 4 - What triggers arthrofibrosis?
- Normal healing response after joint injury or surgery
- Abnormal healing response in arthrofibrosis
Part 5 - Early signs and symptoms
- Normal Expectations after Surgery or Injury
- High Index of Suspicion
- Alert Signals
- Objective alerts on serial measurement
- Key Message
- Caveat - Remember that a limitation of ROM may have causes other than arthrofibrosis
Part 6 - Established arthrofibrosis - options for management
- Adhesions inside the joint spaces
- Exuberant fibrosis affecting joint structures and obliteration of synovial pouches
- Scar tissue contraction and consequences outside the joint
Part 7 - Arthroscopic surgery
- Arthroscopic Lysis of Adhesions and Removal of Scar Tissues
Part 8 - Open debridement and soft tissue release
- Open z-plasty, medial-lateral retinacular tissues
- Posterior Medial-Lateral Capsulotomy
Part 9 - Rehabilitation After Operative Procedures for Arthrofibrosis
- In-Patient Physical Therapy Program
Part 10 - Surgery for chronic patella infera
- Treating Early Patella Infera
- Treating Chronic Patella Infera
Part 11 - Preventing arthrofibrosis
- Magnitude of the injury
- Preoperative issues
- Technical factors at surgery
- Postoperative issues: Restore knee motion and quadriceps muscle function
- Mobilize the kneecap immediately following surgery
- Patient compliance with rehabilitation
- Infection
- Intervene early when ROM progress ceases
Part 12 - The tragedy of arthrofibrosis
The information offered on the website is designed to support, not to replace, the relationship between patient and clinician. The revenue from this site is derived from context-sensitive advertising (Google Ads), affiliate advertising and individual donations from bulletin board users.
»
- Printer-friendly version
- Login to post comments
