All Stories

  1. Ream and run and total shoulder: patient and shoulder characteristics in five hundred forty-four concurrent cases
  2. Significant improvement in patient self-assessed comfort and function at six weeks after the smooth and move procedure for shoulders with irreparable rotator cuff tears and retained active elevation
  3. One and two-year clinical outcomes for a polyethylene glenoid with a fluted peg: one thousand two hundred seventy individual patients from eleven centers
  4. The contribution of the scapula to active shoulder motion and self-assessed function in three hundred and fifty two patients prior to elective shoulder surgery
  5. Characterizing the Propionibacterium Load in Revision Shoulder Arthroplasty
  6. Single-Stage Revision Is Effective for Failed Shoulder Arthroplasty with Positive Cultures for Propionibacterium
  7. Propionibacterium in Shoulder Arthroplasty
  8. Measurement of active shoulder motion using the Kinect, a commercially available infrared position detection system
  9. Propionibacterium are common in failed shoulder replacements.
  10. Propionibacterium can be isolated from deep cultures obtained at primary arthroplasty despite intravenous antimicrobial prophylaxis
  11. The ream and run: not for every patient, every surgeon or every problem
  12. Substantial cultures of Propionibacterium can be found in apparently aseptic shoulders revised three years or more after the index arthroplasty
  13. Can the Ream and Run Procedure Improve Glenohumeral Relationships and Function for Shoulders With the Arthritic Triad?
  14. The Quality of Upper Extremity Orthopedic Care in Liability Claims Filed and Claims Paid
  15. Failure of the Glenoid Component in Anatomic Total Shoulder Arthroplasty
  16. Origin of Propionibacterium in Surgical Wounds and Evidence-Based Approach for Culturing Propionibacterium from Surgical Sites
  17. CORR Insights®: Factors That Influence the Choice to Undergo Surgery for Shoulder and Elbow Conditions
  18. Axillary View: Arthritic Glenohumeral Anatomy and Changes After Ream and Run
  19. Published Evidence Demonstrating the Causation of Glenohumeral Chondrolysis by Postoperative Infusion of Local Anesthetic Via a Pain Pump
  20. Prognostic Factors for Positive Bacterial Cultures in a Large Shoulder Arthroplasty Revision Series
  21. Demographics of Disclosure of Conflicts of Interest at the 2011 Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
  22. Lessons Regarding the Safety of Orthopaedic Patient Care
  23. Prognostic Factors for Bacterial Cultures Positive for Propionibacterium acnes and Other Organisms in a Large Series of Revision Shoulder Arthroplasties Performed for Stiffness, Pain, or Loosening
  24. The Prognosis for Improvement in Comfort and Function After the Ream-and-Run Arthroplasty for Glenohumeral Arthritis
  25. Intramedullary Fibular and Impaction Allografting in Revision Total Elbow Arthroplasty With Endosteal Deficiency
  26. Published Evidence Relevant to the Diagnosis of Impingement Syndrome of the Shoulder
  27. Shoulder hemiarthroplasty with concentric glenoid reaming in patients 55 years old or less
  28. Optimization of Periprosthetic Culture for Diagnosis of Propionibacterium acnes Prosthetic Joint Infection
  29. Commentary on Codman’s 1911 article on rotator cuff repairs
  30. A reproducible and practical method for documenting the position of the humeral head center relative to the scapula on standardized plain radiographs
  31. Risk Factors for Chondrolysis of the Glenohumeral Joint
  32. A quantitative method for determining medial migration of the humeral head after shoulder arthroplasty: preliminary results in assessing glenoid wear at a minimum of two years after hemiarthroplasty with concentric glenoid reaming
  33. A method for documenting the change in center of rotation with reverse total shoulder arthroplasty and its application to a consecutive series of 68 shoulders having reconstruction with one of two different reverse prostheses
  34. Glenohumeral chondrolysis: A systematic review of 100 cases from the English language literature
  35. Charles Neer: On the giant of the shoulder
  36. Postsurgical Chondrolysis of the Shoulder
  37. Treatment of osseous defects associated with anterior shoulder instability
  38. Shoulder Hemiarthroplasty With Nonprosthetic Glenoid Arthroplasty
  39. Commentary
  40. Glenohumeral Arthritis and Its Management
  41. Glenohumeral Instability
  42. Rotator Cuff
  43. Pronation can increase the pressure on the posterior interosseous nerve under the arcade of Frohse: A possible mechanism of palsy after two-incision repair for distal biceps rupture—Clinical experience and a cadaveric investigation
  44. Preface
  45. Bilateral posterior sternoclavicular dislocations
  46. Full-thickness rotator cuff tear prevalence and correlation with function and co-morbidities in patients sixty-five years and older
  47. Rotator-Cuff Failure
  48. Factors affecting fixation of the glenoid component of a reverse total shoulder prothesis
  49. Intramedullary reaming for press-fit fixation of a humeral component removes cortical bone asymmetrically
  50. Shoulder arthroplasty: The socket perspective
  51. The complex characteristics of 282 unsatisfactory shoulder arthroplasties
  52. Nonprosthetic glenoid arthroplasty with humeral hemiarthroplasty and total shoulder arthroplasty yield similar self-assessed outcomes in the management of comparable patients with glenohumeral arthritis
  53. The types and severity of complications associated with interscalene brachial plexus block anesthesia: Local and national evidence
  54. The effect of total shoulder arthroplasty on self-assessed deficits in shoulder function in patients with capsulorrhaphy arthropathy
  55. Spherical Glenoid Reaming With Humeral Hemiarthroplasty: A Nonprosthetic, Orthobiologic Approach to Shoulder Arthroplasty
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  58. Direct injection of blood into the labrum enhances the stability provided by the glenoid labral socket
  59. Rotator-cuff failure and treatment
  60. Alterations in surface geometry in retrieved polyethylene glenoid component
  61. Deficits in shoulder function and general health associated with sixteen common shoulder diagnoses: A study of 2674 patients
  62. Using a freeze substitution fixation technique and histological crimp analysis for characterizing regions of strain in ligaments loadedIn Situ
  63. Characterizing the effect of diagnosis on presenting deficits and outcomes after total shoulder arthroplasty
  64. Patient functional self-assessment in late glenoid component failure at three to eleven years after total shoulder arthroplasty
  65. PEG-grafted chitosan as an injectable thermosensitive hydrogel for sustained protein release
  66. PEG-Grafted Chitosan as an Injectable Thermoreversible Hydrogel
  67. Healing of reamed glenoid bone articulating with a metal humeral hemiarthroplasty: A canine model
  68. ???Ream and Run???: The Principles and Procedures of Non-Prosthetic Glenoid Arthroplasty With Prosthetic Humeral Hemiarthroplasty
  69. Glenoid Cementing May Generate Sufficient Heat to Endanger the Surrounding Bone
  70. Impaction grafting improves the fit of uncemented humeral arthroplasty
  71. A Triceps-on Approach to Semi-Constrained Total Elbow Arthroplasty
  72. Ulnar component fracture after revision total elbow arthroplasty with proximal ulnar bone loss: A report of 2 cases
  73. The effect of total shoulder arthroplasty on self-assessed health status is comparable to that of total hip arthroplasty and coronary artery bypassgrafting
  74. The distribution of shoulder replacement among surgeons and hospitals is significantly different than that of hip or knee replacement
  75. The anteroinferior labrum helps center the humeral head on the glenoid
  76. Metastatic carcinoma to the acromion in a patient after total shoulder arthroplasty: A case report and review of the literature
  77. Characteristics of unsatisfactory shoulder arthroplasties
  78. Meta-analysis of Surgical Reconstruction for Anterior Shoulder Instability: A Comparison of Arthroscopic and Open Techniques. (SS-47)
  79. Reply
  80. Observations on retrieved polyethylene glenoid components
  81. Improvement in Comfort and Function After Cuff Repair Without Acromioplasty
  82. Extracapsular Anatomically Contoured Anterior Glenoid Bone Grafting for Complex Glenohumeral Instability
  83. Intrinsic stability of unused and retrieved polyethylene glenoid components
  84. The magnitude and durability of functional improvement after total shoulder arthroplasty for degenerative joint disease
  85. A Conservative Broaching and Impaction Grafting Technique for Humeral Component Placement and Fixation in Shoulder Arthroplasty: The Procrustean Method
  86. Web-based home telemedicine system for orthopedics
  87. Outcome of Nonoperative Management of Full-Thickness Rotator Cuff Tears
  88. Correlates with comfort and function after total shoulder arthroplasty for degenerative joint disease
  89. Letters to the editor
  90. A prospective, multipractice study of shoulder function and health status in patients with documented rotator cuff tears
  91. Self-assessment questionnaires document substantial variability in the clinical expression of rotator cuff tears
  92. Posteroinferior glenoplasty can change glenoid shape and increase the mechanical stability of the shoulder
  93. Monitoring for Compartmental Syndrome Using Near-Infrared Spectroscopy
  94. TOTAL SHOULDER ARTHROPLASTY VERSUS HEMIARTHROPLASTY
  95. MONITORING FOR COMPARTMENTAL SYNDROME USING NEAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY
  96. The Humeroscapular Motion Interface
  97. Arthroscopic management of refractory shoulder stiffness
  98. Complications With the Use of Metal About the Shoulder
  99. A comparison of patients with late-stage rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis of the shoulder using self-assessed shoulder function and health status
  100. Humeral head prosthetic arthroplasty: Surgically relevant geometric considerations
  101. Total shoulder arthroplasty: Some considerations to glenoid surface contact
  102. Patient self-assessment of health status and function in glenohumeral degenerative joint disease
  103. A Model for the Study of Wounds in Normal Elderly Adults and Patients with Peripheral Vascular Disease or Diabetes Mellitus
  104. Reply
  105. Total shoulder arthroplasty: Some considerations related to glenoid surface contact
  106. In vivo quantification of the laxity of normal and unstable glenohumeral joints
  107. Humeral head prosthetic arthroplasty: Surgically relevant geometric considerations
  108. Robotic Assistance in Orthopaedic Surgery
  109. Residual motion and function after glenohumeral or scapulothoracic arthrodesis
  110. Mechanisms of Glenohumeral Joint Stability
  111. Glenohumeral stability from concavity-compression: A quantitative analysis
  112. Humeroscapular positions in a shoulder range-of-motion-examination
  113. Codman's paradox: Sixty years later
  114. A system for describing positions of the humerus relative to the thorax and its use in the presentation of several functionally important arm positions
  115. Laxity of the normal glenohumeral joint: A quantitative in vivo assessment
  116. Presidential Address: American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons, Tenth Anniversary Annual Meeting
  117. Surgical management of complex irreparable rotator cuff deficiency
  118. The technique of glenohumeral arthroplasty
  119. Diagnosis and management of AMBRI syndrome
  120. The Effects of Age and Peripheral Vascular Disease on the Circulatory and Mechanical Response of Skin to Loading
  121. Book Review The Shoulder Edited by Charles A. Rockwood, Jr., and Frederick A. Matsen III. 1108 pp., illustrated. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1990. $175.
  122. Circulatory and mechanical response of skin to loading
  123. Sonographic Evaluation of the Rotator Cuff
  124. Ligament length relationships in the moving knee
  125. Hydraulic resistance: A measure of vascular outflow obstruction in osteonecrosis
  126. Glenoid loosening in total shoulder arthroplasty
  127. Reliability of transcutaneous oxygen tension (TcPO2) measurements in elderly normal subjects
  128. Reliability of transcutaneous oxygen tension (TcPO2) measurements in elderly normal subjects
  129. The Effects of Compression and Elevation on the Circulation to the Skin of the Hand as Reflected by Transcutaneous PO2
  130. The Effects of Compression and Elevation on the Circulation to the Skin of the Hand as Reflected by Transcutaneous PO2
  131. Factors Affecting the Tolerance of Muscle Circulation and Function for Increased Tissue Pressure
  132. Compartmental Syndromes in Children
  133. The Effects of Limb Elevation and Dependency on Local Arteriovenous Gradients in Normal Human Limbs with Particular Reference to Limbs with Increased Tissue Pressure
  134. Transcutaneous Oxygen Measurement in Reconstructive Surgery
  135. Transcutaneous PO2
  136. Nicolas Andry Award
  137. Compartmental Syndromes
  138. Further Investigations on the Pathophysiology of the Compartmental Syndrome
  139. An Animal Model of the Compartmental Syndrome
  140. Compartmental Syndromes
  141. Compartmental Syndromes
  142. THE DEEP POSTERIOR COMPARTMENTAL SYNDROME OF THE LEG
  143. Henry W. Meyerding Essay Award???3rd Prize
  144. Neurovascular Complications Following Tibial Osteotomy in Children
  145. The Effect of Local Cooling on Postfracture Swelling
  146. Effects of experimental ischemia on electrolytes of cortical cerebrospinal fluid and on brain water
  147. Clinical Comparison of Two 99m Tc Tracers for Brain Scanning: Pertechnetate vs. Labeled Albumin