No hay productos en el carrito



Arthritis and Arthroplasty. the Shoulder (Searchable Full Text Online)
Dines, David
1ª Edición Julio 2009
Inglés
Tapa dura
336 pags
1000 gr
22 x 28 x 2 cm
ISBN 9781416049753
Editorial Saunders (W.B.) Co Ltd
Description
The Shoulder—a volume in the new Arthritis and Arthroplasty series—offers expert guidance on everything from patient selection and pre-operative planning to surgical approaches and techniques. Clear, evidence-based coverage details which technology and methodology used for total shoulder arthroplasty, reconstruction or revision is best for each patient. Access discussions of debates on total shoulder arthroplasty versus hemiarthroplasty; resurfacing, glenoid bone loss, infection, revision shoulder arthroplasty and more. Explore alternatives to total shoulder arthroplasty in younger arthritic patients and view expertly narrated video demonstrations of surgical techniques. In addition to providing practical, pragmatic advice in a concise, readable format, this Expert Consult title offers the full text of the book, as well as links to PubMed and periodic content updates, online at expertconsult.com.
Key Features
- Access the full text of the book—as well as links to PubMed and periodic content updates on outcome data, component materials, and surgical techniques—online at expertconsult.com.
- Features procedural videos—narrated by experts—on the included DVD so you can see how to perform particular techniques.
- Covers reverse shoulder Arthroplasty (RSA), glenoid loosening, soft tissue failure and other hot topics to keep you abreast of the latest developments in the specialty.
- Provides evidence-based, clinically focused guidance on patient selection, pre-operative planning, technical considerations, disease specific options, the management and avoidance of complications, salvage and revision strategies, rehabilitation and more.
- Discusses variations in technique, including soft tissue releases and glenoid exposure, bone grafts, resurfacing or more radical removal of bone, and minimally invasive technique where the exposure is more limited so you can choose which is most effective for each patient.
- Explores alternatives to total shoulder arthropalsty in younger arthritic patients, including partial surface replacements, humeral head resurfacing, hemiarthroplasty, interpositional arthroplasty.
- Includes a review page in every chapter for quick reference to pearls and pitfalls for each topic.
- Presents photographs and interpretive drawings of surgical techniques in full color to bring out intraoperative details as they appear in the operating room.
Table of Contents
Part 1: Arthritis and Arthroplasty of Shoulder
- Chapter 1. Etiology, Diagnosis and Non-operative Treatment of the Arthritic Shoulder, Erica Taylor and Cato T. Laurencin
Part 2: Surgical Options in Shoulder Arthritis
- Chapter 2. Debridement, Chondroplasty and Soft Tissue Releases Emilie V. Cheung and Marc R. Safran
- Chapter 3. The Evolution of Total Shoulder Arthroplasty, Peter A. Ugolini and John M. Fenlin
- Chapter 4. Partial Surface replacements: Indications, Techniques and Results, Sam Akhavan and Anthony Miniaci
- Chapter 5. Humeral Head Resurfacing; Indications, Technique and Results, Stephen A Copeland and Jaikumar G. Relwani
- Chapter 6. Hemiarthroplasy for Arthritis
- Charles A. Rockwood, Robert M Orfaly
- Chapter 7. Interpositional Arthroplasty, Wayne Z. Burkhead, and Sumant G. Krishnan
- Chapter 8. Total Shoulder Arthroplasty in Primary Osteoarthritis - Technique and Results, Christopher C. Dodson, David M. Dines, and Gerald R. Williams
Part 3: Total Shoulder Arthroplasty Technical Considerations
- Chapter 9. Soft Tissue Releases and Glenoid Exposure, Frances Cuomo and Danny P Chan
- Chapter 10. Glenoid Bone Loss Treated with Bone Grafts, Joseph P. Iannotti and Jason J. Scalise
- Chapter 11. The Rotator Cuff Deficient Arthritic Shoulder. Michael J. Angel, David M. Dines, and Cato T. Laurencin
- Chapter 12. Rehabilitation after Shoulder Arthroplasty, Martin J. Kelley and Brian G. Leggin
Part 4: Disease Specific Options
- Chapter 13. Arthroplasty in Rheumatologic Conditions: Special Considerations, Adam M. Smith and John W. Sperling
- Chapter 14. Total Shoulder Arthroplasty or Hemiarthroplasty for Arthritis: Current Trends and Technical Considerations, Matthew D. Williams. T. Bradley Edwards, and Gary M. Gartsman
- Chapter 15. Shoulder Arthroplasty in Post-Traumatic Arthropathy: Technique and Results, Danny P. Chan and Peter D. McCann
- Chapter 16. Arthroplasty for Arthritis after Instability including Post-Capsulorrhaphy and Chronic Dislocations, H. Griffith, Robert H. Rolf, Nata Parnes, Zachary R. Zimmer, Laurence D. Higgins, and Jon J.P. Warner
- Chapter 17. Avascular Necrosis of the Shoulder, Brian T. Feeley and Edward V. Craig
- Chapter 18. Reverse Shoulder Arthroplasty: Indications. Technique and Results, David N. Collins
- Chapter 19. The Reverse Shoulder Prosthesis for Acute and Chronic Fractures, Mark A Frankle
Part 5: Complications and Revision
- Chapter 20. Complications of Conventional Shoulder Arthroplasty, Simon P Frostick and Paramasivam Sathyamoorthy
- Chapter 21. Complications and Treatment of Reverse Shoulder Prosthesis, Wesley P. Phipatanakul and Tom R. Norris
- Chapter 22. Infection: Diagnosis and Treatment Options, Hisham Bismar, Amy Jarosz, and William H. Seitz, Jr.
- Chapter 23. Soft Tissue Failure after Arthroplasty: Rotator Cuff and Subscapularis, Konrad I. Gruson and Evan L. Flatow
- Chapter 24. Glenoid Loosening: Diagnosis and Treatment, Christopher Kepler, Russell F Warren, and Shane J. Nho
- Chapter 25. Revision Shoulder Arthroplasty: Technical Considerations and Outcomes, Joshua S. Dines, Christopher Uggen, Jordan Kerker, and David M. Dines
- Chapter 26. Reverse Prosthesis for Revision Shoulder Arthroplasty, Bryan Wall and Gilles Walch
Author Information
By David Dines, MD, Clinical Professor and Chair, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Long Island Jewish Medical Center / Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Great Neck, NY; Associate Clinical Professor, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY; Gerald R. Williams, Jr., MD, Professor and Chief, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Penn Presbytarian Medical Center, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA and Cato Laurencin, MD, PhD, University Professor, Lillian T. Pratt Distinguished Professor and Chair, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA
© 2025 Axón Librería S.L.
2.149.0