104 results on '"Tokish, John M."'
Search Results
2. Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Healthy Athletes: An Umbrella Review of Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses.
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Warrier, Alec A., Azua, Eric N., Kasson, Luke B., Allahabadi, Sachin, Khan, Zeeshan A., Mameri, Enzo S., Swindell, Hasani W., Tokish, John M., and Chahla, Jorge
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LEAN body mass ,ANDROGEN receptors ,RECOMBINANT erythropoietin ,PERFORMANCE-enhancing drugs ,ANGIOTENSIN converting enzyme - Abstract
Context: Many clinicians, trainers, and athletes do not have a true understanding of the effects of commonly used performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) on performance and health. Objective: To provide an evidence-based review of 7 commonly used pharmacological interventions for performance enhancement in athletes. Data Sources: PubMed and Scopus databases were searched on April 8, 2022. Study Selection: Systematic reviews (SRs) and meta-analyses (MAs) assessing the performance-enhancing effects of the following interventions were included: androgenic anabolic steroids (AAS), growth hormone (GH), selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs), creatine, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)-inhibitors, recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO), and cannabis. Study Design: Umbrella review of SRs and MAs. Level of Evidence: Level 4. Data Extraction: Primary outcomes collected were (1) body mass, (2) muscle strength, (3) performance, and (4) recovery. Adverse effects were also noted. Results: A total of 27 papers evaluating 5 pharmacological interventions met inclusion criteria. No studies evaluating SARMs or ACE-inhibitors were included. AAS lead to a 5% to 52% increase in strength and a 0.62 standard mean difference in lean body mass with subsequent lipid derangements. GH alters body composition, without providing a strength or performance benefit, but potential risks include soft tissue edema, fatigue, arthralgias, and carpel tunnel syndrome. Creatine use during resistance training can safely increase total and lean body mass, strength, and performance in high-intensity, short-duration, repetitive tasks. Limited evidence supports rHuEPO benefit on performance despite increases in both VO
2 max and maximal power output, and severe cardiovascular risks are documented. Cannabis provides no performance benefit and may even impair athletic performance. Conclusion: In young healthy persons and athletes, creatine can safely provide a performance-enhancing benefit when taken in controlled doses. AAS, GH, and rHuEPO are associated with severe adverse events and do not support a performance benefit, despite showing the ability to change bodily composition, strength, and/or physiologic measures. Cannabis may have an ergolytic, instead of ergogenic, effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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3. Hamstring Tendon Autograft Is Associated With Increased Knee Valgus Moment After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: A Biomechanical Analysis.
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Tummala, Sailesh V., Vij, Neeraj, Glattke, Kaycee E., Vaughn, Jeffrey, Brinkman, Joseph C., Winters, Jenni, Brennan, Amber, Salehi, Hadi, Zhao, Sixue, Chhabra, Anikar, Tokish, John M., and Menzer, Heather
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ANTERIOR cruciate ligament surgery ,AUTOGRAFTS ,HAMSTRING muscle ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,KNEE ,PATELLAR tendon - Abstract
Background: There is limited evidence related to the effects of autograft type on functional performance after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). Purpose/Hypothesis: This study aimed to compare biomechanical outcomes during a drop vertical jump (DVJ) between patients with a hamstring tendon (HT) autograft, quadriceps tendon (QT) autograft with bone block, QT autograft without bone block, and bone–patellar tendon–bone autograft at 6 months postoperatively in an adolescent population. The authors' hypothesized there would be differences in DVJ biomechanics between athletes depending on the type of autograft used. Study Design: Controlled laboratory study. Methods: Patients aged 8 to 18 years who underwent primary ACLR were included for analysis. Kinematic and kinetic data collected during a DVJ using a 3-dimensional computerized marker system were assessed at 6 months after ACLR and compared with the uninjured contralateral limb. Results: A total of 155 participants were included. There were no significant differences in terms of age, sex, or affected leg (P ≥.1973) between groups. The HT group was significantly associated with a larger knee valgus moment at initial contact compared with the QT group (28 × 10
–2 vs −35 × 10–2 N·m/kg, respectively; P =.0254) and a significantly larger maximum hip adduction moment compared with the QT with bone block group (30 × 10–2 vs −4 × 10–2 N·m/kg, respectively; P =.0426). Both the QT with bone block (–12 × 10–2 vs −3 × 10–2 N·m/kg, respectively; P =.0265) and QT (–13 × 10–2 vs −3 × 10–2 N·m/kg, respectively; P =.0459) groups demonstrated significantly decreased mean knee extension moments compared with the HT group. Conclusion: The findings of this study suggest that utilizing an HT autograft resulted in a significantly increased knee valgus moment at initial contact compared with a QT autograft without bone block at 6 months after ACLR in adolescent patients performing a DVJ. A QT autograft was found to be associated with significantly decreased extensor mechanism function compared with an HT autograft. Clinical Relevance: This study adds unique kinematic and kinetic information regarding various ACLR autograft options and highlights the biomechanical deficits that should be taken into consideration in rehabilitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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4. Assessment of glenoid baseplate initial micromotion and fixation strength in reverse total shoulder arthroplasty designs using a direct shear force methodology.
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Parr, Therese E, Anderson, Jennifer K, Marionneaux, Alan M., Tokish, John M, Tolan, Stefan J, Hawkins, Richard J, Kissenberth, Michael J, and DesJardins, John D
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TOTAL shoulder replacement ,REVERSE total shoulder replacement ,SHEARING force ,GLENOHUMERAL joint ,RANGE of motion of joints - Abstract
Background: In a reverse total shoulder arthroplasty, the altered glenohumeral joint center of rotation subjects the glenoid baseplate to increased shear forces and potential loosening. Methods: This study examined glenoid baseplate micromotion and initial fixation strength with the application of direct shear force in a Sawbone model. The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty systems examined were the DJO Reverse® Shoulder Prosthesis, the Exactech Equinoxe® Reverse System, and the Tornier Aequalis
TM Reverse Shoulder Prosthesis. Specimens were cyclically tested with increasing shear loads until 150 µm of displacement between the implant and glenoid was achieved, and subsequently until failure, classified as either 1 cm of implant/glenoid displacement or fracture. Results: The average load withstood for the 150 µm threshold for DJO, Tornier, and Exactech was 460 ± 88 N, 525 ± 100 N, and 585 ± 160 N, respectively. The average total load at device failure for DJO, Tornier, and Exactech was 980 ± 260 N, 1260 ± 120 N, and 1350 ± 230 N, respectively. Discussion: The Exactech implant design trended toward requiring more load to induce micromotion at each threshold and to induce device failure, most commonly seen as inferior screw pull out. This study proposes design features that may enhance fixation and suggests little risk of initial micromotion or failure during initial post-operative recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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5. The addition of preoperative three-dimensional analysis alters implant choice in shoulder arthroplasty.
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Werner, Brian C, Denard, Patrick J, Tokish, John M, Bedi, Asheesh, Donegan, Ryan P, Metcalfe, Nick, and Dines, Joshua S
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ARTHROPLASTY ,SHOULDER ,COMPUTED tomography - Abstract
Background: The primary objective of the present study was to investigate how preoperative imaging modalities including 3D computed tomography (CT) scans with preoperative planning software affect implant choice for shoulder arthroplasty. Methods: X-ray, uncorrected 2D CT scans, and 3D CT scans from 21 patients undergoing primary arthroplasty were reviewed by five shoulder surgeons. Each surgeon measured glenoid version, inclination and humeral head subluxation, and then selected an anatomic or reverse shoulder arthroplasty implant based only on these imaging parameters. Each surgeon virtually positioned the implant. Agreement between surgeons and changes in plan for individual surgeons between imaging modalities were assessed. Results: Average measurements of native version, inclination, and subluxation were similar across all imaging modalities with very good interobserver reliability. Overall, there was a high rate of variability in choice of implant depending on imaging modality. Agreement on implant selection between surgeons improved from 68.6% using x-ray to 80.0% with 3D CT. Introducing age added significant variability, reducing agreement on implant choice to 61.0% with 3D CT. Conclusions: The use of preoperative 3D planning changes implant choice in nearly one-third of cases compared to plain radiographs and improves surgeon agreement on implant choice compared to x-ray and 2D CT. Level of evidence: III. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Effect of Active and Passive Function of the Posterosuperior Rotator Cuff on Compensatory Muscle Loads in the Shoulder.
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Moroder, Philipp, Chamberlain, Aaron, Gabriel, Stefan M., Jacofsky, Marc C., Sengun, Mehmet Z., Spenciner, David B., Tokish, John M., and Lacheta, Lucca
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- 2022
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7. Prevalence of Cannabinoid (CBD) Use in Orthopaedic Sports Medicine Patients.
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Deckey, David G., Doan, Matthew, Hassebrock, Jeffrey D., Patel, Karan A., Economopoulos, Kostas, Tokish, John M., Bingham, Joshua S., and Chhabra, Anikar
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- 2022
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8. The Intergluteal Fat Stripe in Patients With Hip Abductor Tears.
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Beicker, Clint R., Hudspeth, L. Jared, Shanley, Ellen, Tokish, John M., and Folk, Jason
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- 2022
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9. Radiographic parameters associated with excellent versus poor range of motion outcomes following reverse shoulder arthroplasty.
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Haidamous, Georges, Lädermann, Alexandre, Hartzler, Robert U, Parsons, Bradford O, Lederman, Evan S, Tokish, John M, and Denard, Patrick J
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REVERSE total shoulder replacement ,TOTAL shoulder replacement ,RANGE of motion of joints ,HUMERUS - Abstract
Background: The purpose was to evaluate the relationship of component size and position to postoperative range of motion following reverse shoulder arthroplasty. The hypothesis was that increased lateralization, larger glenospheres, and a decreased acromiohumeral distance would be associated with excellent postoperative range of motion. Methods: A retrospective multicenter study was performed at a minimum of one year postoperatively on 160 patients who underwent primary reverse shoulder arthroplasty with a 135° humeral component. Outcomes were stratified based on postoperative forward flexion and external rotation into excellent (n = 42), defined as forward flexion >140° and external rotation > 30°, or poor (n = 36), defined as forward flexion <100° and external rotation < 15°. Radiographic measurements and component features were compared between the two groups. Results: A larger glenosphere size was associated with an excellent outcome (p = 0.009). A 2-mm posterior offset humeral cup (p = 0.012) and an increased inferior glenosphere overhang (3.1 mm vs 1.4 mm; p = 0.002) were also associated with excellent outcomes. Humeral lateralization and distalization were not associated with an excellent outcome. Conclusion: L arger glenosphere size and inferior positioning as well as posterior humeral offset are associated with improved postoperative range of motion following reverse shoulder arthroplasty. Level of Evidence: Level 3, retrospective comparative study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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10. Generating the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Score Using Multivariable Predictive Models and Computer Adaptive Testing to Reduce Survey Burden.
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Tenan, Matthew S., Galvin, Joseph W., Mauntel, Timothy C., Tokish, John M., Bailey, James R., Barlow, Brian T., Bevevino, Adam J., Bradley, Matthew W., Cameron, Kenneth L., Burns, Travis C., Eckel, Tobin T., Garcia, Estephan J., Giuliani, Jeffrey R., Haley, Chad A., Hurvitz, Andrew P., Janney, Cory F., Kilcoyne, Kelly G., Lanzi, Joseph T., LeClere, Lance E., and McDonald, Lucas S.
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SHOULDER surgery ,COMPUTER adaptive testing ,PAIN ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,LIFE skills ,PREDICTION models ,STATISTICAL correlation ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background: The preferred patient-reported outcome measure for the assessment of shoulder conditions continues to evolve. Previous studies correlating the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) computer adaptive tests (CATs) to the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) score have focused on a singular domain (pain or physical function) but have not evaluated the combined domains of pain and physical function that compose the ASES score. Additionally, previous studies have not provided a multivariable prediction tool to convert PROMIS scores to more familiar legacy scores. Purpose: To establish a valid predictive model of ASES scores using a nonlinear combination of PROMIS domains for physical function and pain. Study Design: Cohort study (Diagnosis); Level of evidence, 3. Methods: The Military Orthopaedics Tracking Injuries and Outcomes Network (MOTION) database is a prospectively collected repository of patient-reported outcomes and intraoperative variables. Patients in MOTION research who underwent shoulder surgery and completed the ASES, PROMIS Physical Function, and PROMIS Pain Interference at varying time points were included in the present analysis. Nonlinear multivariable predictive models were created to establish an ASES index score and then validated using "leave 1 out" techniques and minimal clinically important difference /substantial clinical benefit (MCID/SCB) analysis. Results: A total of 909 patients completed the ASES, PROMIS Physical Function, and PROMIS Pain Interference at presurgery, 6 weeks, 6 months, and 1 year after surgery, providing 1502 complete observations. The PROMIS CAT predictive model was strongly validated to predict the ASES (Pearson coefficient = 0.76-0.78; R
2 = 0.57-0.62; root mean square error = 13.3-14.1). The MCID/SCB for the ASES was 21.7, and the best ASES index MCID/SCB was 19.4, suggesting that the derived ASES index is effective and can reliably re-create ASES scores. Conclusion: The PROMIS CAT predictive models are able to approximate the ASES score within 13 to 14 points, which is 7 points more accurate than the ASES MCID/SCB derived from the sample. Our ASES index algorithm, which is freely available online (https://osf.io/ctmnd/), has a lower MCID/SCB than the ASES itself. This algorithm can be used to decrease patient survey burden by 11 questions and provide a reliable ASES analog to clinicians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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11. Does Functional Bracing of the Unstable Shoulder Improve Return to Play in Scholastic Athletes? Returning the Unstable Shoulder to Play.
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Kwapisz, Adam, Shanley, Ellen, Momaya, Amit M., Young, Chris, Kissenberth, Michael J., Tolan, Stefan J., Lonergan, Keith T., Wyland, Douglas J., Hawkins, Richard J., Pill, Stephan G., and Tokish, John M.
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SHOULDER injuries ,SPORTS injuries - Abstract
Background: Functional bracing is often used as an adjunct to nonoperative treatment of anterior shoulder instability, but no study has evaluated the effectiveness of in-season bracing. The purpose of this study was to examine successful return to play in a nonoperative cohort of adolescent athletes with in-season shoulder instability and compare those athletes treated with bracing to those who were not. Hypothesis: The use of functional bracing will improve success rates in a cohort of athletes treated nonoperatively for in-season shoulder instability. Study Design: Cohort study. Level of Evidence: Level 3. Methods: A total of 97 athletes with anterior shoulder instability were followed for a minimum of 1 year. The mean age was 15.8 ± 1.4 years (range, 12.0-18.0 years). All athletes were treated with initial nonoperative management. Twenty athletes (21%) were also treated with bracing while 77 (79%) were not. The athlete completing the current season and 1 subsequent season without surgery or time lost from shoulder injury was defined as a successful outcome. Results: There was no statistical difference in nonoperative success rates between the braced and nonbraced athletes (P = 0.33). Braced athletes (n = 20) returned to play 80% of the time, while nonbraced athletes (n = 77) returned at a rate of 88%. Of the braced athletes, 85% were football players (n = 17). A football-only comparison demonstrated no difference between braced failures (26%) and nonbraced failures (16%) (P = 0.47). Conclusion: This is the first study to evaluate the utility of functional bracing in returning an athlete to sport and completing a full subsequent season without surgery or time loss due to injury of the shoulder. In adolescent athletes with shoulder instability treated nonoperatively, functional bracing did not result in increased success rates when compared with no bracing. Clinical Relevance: The data from this study indicate that functional bracing may not improve success rates for athletes with shoulder instability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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12. The Nonoperative Instability Severity Index Score (NISIS): A Simple Tool to Guide Operative Versus Nonoperative Treatment of the Unstable Shoulder.
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Tokish, John M., Thigpen, Charles A., Kissenberth, Michael J., Tolan, Stefan J., Lonergan, Keith T., Tokish Jr, John M., Dickens, Jonathan F., Hawkins, Richard J., and Shanley, Ellen
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SHOULDER abnormalities ,REGRESSION analysis ,DECISION making - Abstract
Background: The management of the adolescent athlete after initial shoulder instability remains controversial. Hypothesis: Individual risk factors in athletes with shoulder instability who are managed nonoperatively can be integrated into a scoring system that can predict successful return to sport. Study Design: Retrospective cohort study. Level of Evidence: Level 4. Methods: A total of 57 scholastic athletes with primary anterior shoulder instability who were managed nonoperatively were reviewed. Success was defined as a return to index sport at the same level and playing at least 1 subsequent season without missed time as a result of the shoulder. Patient-specific risk factors were individually evaluated, and odds ratios were calculated. A 10-point Nonoperative Injury Severity Index Score (NISIS) incorporated the risk factors for failure. This score was then retrospectively applied with regression analysis and a chi-square analysis to determine the overall optimal score that predicted failure of nonoperative management. Results: In total, 6 risk factors for failure were included in the NISIS: age (>15 years), bone loss, type of instability, type of sport (contact vs noncontact), male sex, and arm dominance. Overall, 79% of patients treated nonoperatively were able to successfully return to sport. Nearly all (97%) low-risk patients (NISIS <7) successfully returned to sport, while only 59% of high-risk patients returned to sport, a relative risk of 12.2 (P = 0.001). High-risk patients with unipolar bone loss successfully returned (100%), but 67% of high-risk patients with bipolar bone loss failed. Conclusion: The NISIS is a simple and effective clinical tool to determine successful nonoperative management following anterior shoulder instability and may be helpful in guiding decision making when presented with the unstable shoulder in the scholastic athlete. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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13. Reduction of Postoperative Hip Arthroscopy Pain With an Ultrasound-Guided Fascia Iliaca Block: A Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Glomset, John L., Kim, Eugene, Tokish, John M., Renfro, Suzanne D., Seckel, Tyler B., Adams, Kyle J., and Folk, Jason
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POSTOPERATIVE pain treatment ,ANALGESICS ,ANALYSIS of covariance ,ANESTHESIA ,ARTHROSCOPY ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,CONVALESCENCE ,FISHER exact test ,INTRA-articular injections ,NARCOTICS ,NERVE block ,PATIENTS ,POSTOPERATIVE pain ,RECOVERY rooms ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SURGERY ,ULTRASONIC imaging ,PAIN management ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,PATIENT readmissions ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ROPIVACAINE - Abstract
Background: Ultrasound-guided fascia iliaca blocks have been used for pain control after hip arthroscopy. There is little evidence regarding their effectiveness in comparison with other pain control modalities in patients who have undergone hip arthroscopy. Purpose: To compare the efficacy of ultrasound-guided fascia iliac block with intra-articular ropivacaine in controlling pain after hip arthroscopy. Study Design: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 2. Methods: Between 2015 and 2017, patients (N = 95) undergoing hip arthroscopy were randomly assigned to 2 groups. The first group received an ultrasound-guided fascia iliaca block with 50 to 60 mL of 0.35% ropivacaine. The second group received an intra-articular injection of 20 mL of 0.5% ropivacaine at the completion of the surgical case. Primary outcomes were postoperative pain scores in the recovery room; at postanesthesia care unit (PACU) discharge; and at 2 weeks, 6 weeks, and 3 months. Secondary outcomes included intraoperative and PACU narcotic usage (converted to morphine equivalent use) as well as readmission rates, PACU recovery time, and postoperative nausea and vomiting. Results: Postoperative pain across all points did not significantly differ between the groups. Intraoperative and PACU narcotics did not differ significantly between the groups. Readmission rates, PACU recovery time, and postoperative nausea and vomiting did not significantly differ between the groups. There were no associated complications in either group. Conclusion: Ultrasound-guided fascia iliaca block for hip arthroscopy had no clinical advantage when compared with onetime intra-articular ropivacaine injection. Registration: NCT02365961 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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14. Return to Sport as an Outcome Measure for Shoulder Instability: Surprising Findings in Nonoperative Management in a High School Athlete Population.
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Shanley, Ellen, Thigpen, Charles, Brooks, John, Hawkins, Richard J., Momaya, Amit, Kwapisz, Adam, Kissenberth, Michael J., and Tokish, John M.
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JOINT hypermobility ,SHOULDER injury treatment ,CHI-squared test ,COLLEGE athletes ,HIGH school students ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,SHOULDER dislocations ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SPORTS participation ,STATISTICAL significance ,CONTACT sports ,RELATIVE medical risk ,SUBLUXATION ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Young age and contact sports have been postulated as risk factors for anterior shoulder instability. Management after shoulder instability is controversial, with studies suggesting that nonoperative management increases the risk of recurrence. Several studies examined return to play after an in-season instability episode, and few followed these patients to determine if they were able to successfully compete in a subsequent season. No study has evaluated this question in a high school athlete population. Purpose: To compare the likelihood of return to scholastic sport and complete the next full season without an additional time-loss injury among athletes with anterior shoulder instability in terms of treatment, instability type, and sport classification. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2 Methods: Athletes were included in this study as identified by a scholastic athletic trainer as experiencing a traumatic time-loss anterior shoulder instability injury related to school-sponsored participation. The cohort was predominantly male (n = 108, 84%) and consisted mostly of contact athletes (n = 101, 78%). All athletes had dislocation or subluxation diagnosed by a board-certified physician who determined the athlete's course of care (nonoperative vs operative). Successful treatment was defined as completion of care and return to the athlete's index sport, with full participation for the following season. Chi-square and relative risk analyses were completed to compare success of treatment (nonoperative vs operative care) and instability type. Separate logistic regressions were used to compare the effect of sex and sport classification on the athletes' ability to return to sport. Statistical significance was set a priori as α = .05. Results: Scholastic athletes (N = 129) received nonoperative (n = 97) or operative (n = 32) care. Nonoperatively treated (85%) and operatively treated (72%) athletes successfully returned to the same sport without injury for at least 1 full season (P = .11). Players sustaining a dislocation were significantly more likely to fail to return when compared with those sustaining a subluxation (26% vs 89%, P = .013). Sex (P = .85) and sport classification (P = .74) did not influence the athlete's ability to return to sport, regardless of treatment type. Conclusion: A high percentage of athletes with shoulder instability achieved successful return to sport without missing any additional time for shoulder injury. Those with subluxations were at almost 3 times the odds of a successful return compared with those sustaining a dislocation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. Validity and Responsiveness of the Single Alpha-numeric Evaluation for Shoulder Patients.
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Thigpen, Charles A., Shanley, Ellen, Momaya, Amit M., Kissenberth, Michael J., Tolan, Stefan J., Tokish, John M., and Hawkins, Richard J.
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SHOULDER physiology ,ANALYSIS of variance ,STATISTICAL correlation ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,DIAGNOSIS of musculoskeletal system diseases ,EVALUATION of organizational effectiveness ,ORTHOPEDIC surgery ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PATIENTS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SHOULDER ,SURGERY ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,STATISTICAL reliability ,PAIN measurement ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: There is an ever-increasing demand for widespread implementation of patient-reported outcomes. However, adoption is slow owing to limitations in clinical infrastructure and resources within busy orthopaedic practices. Prior studies showed the single alpha-numeric evaluation (SANE) score to correlate at a single point in time with the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) score. However, no study has validated the SANE in terms of test-retest reliability, responsiveness, or clinical utility. Purpose: To validate SANE with the ASES across a sample of patients with common orthopaedic shoulder diagnoses. Study Design: Cohort study (diagnosis); Level of evidence, 2. Methods: Patients undergoing rotator cuff repair (n = 77), total shoulder replacement (n = 55), or physical therapy (n = 80) for signs and symptoms of subacromial impingement syndrome (n = 61) or adhesive capsulitis (n = 19) were administered the SANE and ASES at baseline and again at their 3-month follow-up from initial care or surgery (N = 212, mean ± SD age = 52.6 ± 1.2 years, n = 145 women). Interclass correlation coefficient (ICC
2,1 ) and standard error of the measurement (SEm) were used to evaluate the test-retest reliability of the SANE and the validity between the SANE and ASES scores. Analysis of variance (treatment group × time) was used to evaluate the responsiveness to treatment, and a receiver operating characteristic curve was used to establish the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for the SANE as compared with the ASES (α = .05). Floor and ceiling effects were evaluated as the percentage of patients who scored the highest or lowest score on each tool. Results: The SANE demonstrated good pretreatment reliability (ICC2,1 = 0.84, SEM = 3.8), similar to the ASES (ICC2,1 = 0.82, SEM = 3.4). The SANE also showed good agreement with the ASES before and after treatment across all treatment groups (rotator cuff repair, ICC2,1 = 0.85, SEM = 3.4; total shoulder replacement, ICC2,1 = 0.72, SEM = 5.2; physical therapy: ICC2,1 = 0.82, SEM = 2.9). The SANE and ASES displayed similar responsiveness after treatment, with similar mean change and SD within each treatment group. The receiver operating characteristic curve revealed an area under the curve of 0.79 (SE, 0.62; P < .001) and a cutoff of 15% on the SANE, with a sensitivity of 85% to establish the MCID. Acceptable and similar floor and ceiling effects were observed for the ASES (4%) and SANE (9%). Conclusion: The study demonstrates that the SANE is valid for a range of common shoulder diagnoses to assess patient outcomes across operative and nonoperative treatment for shoulder complaints. The MCID of 15% is similar to that of the ASES (11%), suggesting that the SANE is a simple and efficient tool to assess treatment effects for shoulder disorders. Future studies are warranted to confirm these results and compare across other body parts and diagnoses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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16. Glenoid Bone Loss in Posterior Shoulder Instability: Prevalence and Outcomes in Arthroscopic Treatment.
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Hines, Adam, Cook, Jay B., Shaha, James S., Krul, Kevin, Shaha, Steve H., Johnson, John, Bottoni, Craig R., Rowles, Douglas J., and Tokish, John M.
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BONE resorption ,FISHER exact test ,JOINT hypermobility ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,SHOULDER injuries ,T-test (Statistics) ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,CASE-control method - Abstract
Background: Glenoid bone loss is a well-accepted risk factor for failure after arthroscopic stabilization of anterior glenohumeral instability. Glenoid bone loss in posterior instability has been noted relative to its existence in posterior instability surgery. Its effect on outcomes after arthroscopic stabilization has not been specifically evaluated and reported. Purpose: The purpose was to evaluate the presence of posterior glenoid bone loss in a series of patients who had undergone arthroscopic isolated stabilization of the posterior labrum. Bone loss was then correlated to return-to-duty rates, complications, and validated patient-reported outcomes. Study Design: Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: A retrospective review was conducted at a single military treatment facility over a 4-year period (2010-2013). Patients with primary posterior instability who underwent arthroscopic isolated posterior labral repair were included. Preoperative magnetic resonance imaging was used to calculate posterior glenoid bone loss using a standardized “perfect circle” technique. Demographics, return to duty, complications, and reoperations, as well as outcomes scores including the Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation and the Western Ontario Shoulder Instability Index (WOSI) scores, were obtained. Outcomes were analyzed across all patients based on percentage of posterior glenoid bone loss. Bone loss was then categorized as below or above the subcritical threshold of 13.5% to determine if bone loss effected outcomes similar to what has been shown in anterior instability. Results: There were 43 consecutive patients with primary, isolated posterior instability, and 32 (74.4%) completed WOSI scoring. Mean follow-up was 53.7 months (range, 25-82 months) The mean posterior glenoid bone loss was 7.3% (0%-21.5%). Ten of 32 patients (31%) had no appreciable bone loss. Bone loss exceeded 13.5% in 7 of 32 patients (22%), and 2 patients (6%) exceeded 20% bone loss. Return to full duty or activity was nearly 90% overall. However, those with >13.5%, subcritical glenoid bone loss, were statistically less likely to return to full duty (relative risk = 1.8), but outcomes scores, complications, and revision rates were otherwise not different in those with no or minimal bone loss versus those with more significant amounts. Conclusion: Posterior glenoid bone loss has not previously been evaluated independently relative to patients with shoulder instability repairs. Sixty-nine percent of our patients had measurable bone loss, and 22% had greater than 13.5%, or above subcritical bone loss. While these patients were statistically less likely to return to full duty, the reoperation rate, complications, and patient-reported outcomes between groups were not different. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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17. Distal Clavicular Osteochondral Autograft Augmentation for Glenoid Bone Loss: A Comparison of Radius of Restoration Versus Latarjet Graft.
- Author
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Kwapisz, Adam, Fitzpatrick, Kelly, Cook, Jay B., Athwal, George S., and Tokish, John M.
- Subjects
BONE resorption ,AUTOGRAFTS ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DEAD ,LABORATORIES ,SHOULDER ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Bone loss in shoulder instability is a well-recognized cause of failure after stabilization surgery. Many approaches have been described to address glenoid bone loss, including coracoid transfer. This transfer can be technically difficult and has been associated with high complication rates. An ideal alternative to coracoid transfer would be an autologous source of fresh osteochondral graft with enough surface area to replace significant glenoid bone loss. The distal clavicle potentially provides such a graft source that is readily available and low-cost. Purpose: To evaluate distal clavicular autograft reconstruction for instability-related glenoid bone loss, specifically comparing the width of the clavicular autograft with the width of an ipsilateral coracoid graft as prepared for a Latarjet procedure. Further, we sought to compare the articular cartilage thickness of the distal clavicle graft with that of the native glenoid. Study Design: Controlled laboratory study. Methods: Twenty-seven fresh-frozen cadaver specimens were dissected, and an open distal clavicle excision was performed. The coracoid process in each specimen was prepared as has been described for a classic Latarjet coracoid transfer. In each specimen, the distal clavicle graft was compared with the coracoid graft for size and potential of glenoid articular radius of restoration. The distal clavicle graft was also compared with the native glenoid for cartilage thickness. Results: In all specimens, the distal clavicle grafts provided a greater radius of glenoid restoration than the coracoid grafts (P < .0001). On average, the clavicular graft was able to reconstruct 44% of the glenoid diameter, compared with 33% for the coracoid graft (P < .0001). The articular cartilage of the glenoid was significantly thicker (1.4 mm thicker, P < .0001) than that of the distal clavicular autograft (average ± SD, 3.5 ± 0.6 mm vs 2.1 ± 0.8 mm, respectively). When specimens with osteoarthritis were excluded, this difference decreased to 0.97 mm when compared with the clavicular cartilage (P = .0026). Conclusion: The distal clavicle autograft can restore a significantly greater glenoid bone deficit than the Latarjet procedure and has the additional benefit of restoring articular cartilage to the glenoid. The articular cartilage thickness of the distal clavicle is within 1.4 mm of that of the native glenoid. Clinical Relevance: The distal clavicular autograft may be a suitable option for reconstruction of instability-related glenoid bone loss. This graft provides a structural osteochondral autograft with a broader radius of reconstruction than that of a coracoid graft, is locally available, has minimal donor site morbidity, is anatomic, and provides articular cartilage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. “Proprietary Processed” Allografts: Clinical Outcomes and Biomechanical Properties in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.
- Author
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Roberson, Troy A., Abildgaard, Jeffrey T., Wyland, Douglas J., Siffri, Paul C., Geary, Stephen P., Hawkins, Richard J., and Tokish, John M.
- Subjects
HOMOGRAFTS ,ANTERIOR cruciate ligament surgery ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PLASTIC surgery ,BIOMECHANICS ,SURGICAL complications ,IRRADIATION ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,ORGAN donation ,MEDLINE ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,ONLINE information services ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CONTINUING education units - Abstract
Background: The processing of allograft tissues in anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction continues to be controversial. While high-dose irradiation of grafts has received scrutiny for high failure rates, lower dose irradiation and “proprietary-based” nonirradiated sterilization techniques have become increasingly popular, with little in the literature to evaluate their outcomes. Recent studies have suggested that the specifics of allograft processing techniques may be a risk factor for higher failure rates. Purpose: To assess these proprietary processes and their clinical outcomes and biomechanical properties. Study Design: Systematic review. Methods: A systematic review was performed using searches of PubMed, EMBASE, Google Scholar, and Cochrane databases. English-language studies were identified with the following search terms: “allograft ACL reconstruction” (title/abstract), “novel allograft processing” (title/abstract), “allograft anterior cruciate ligament” (title/abstract), “anterior cruciate ligament allograft processing” (title/abstract), or “biomechanical properties anterior cruciate ligament allograft” (title/abstract). Duplicate studies, studies not providing the allograft processing technique, and those not containing the outcomes of interest were excluded. Outcomes of interest included outcome scores, complication and failure rates, and biomechanical properties of the processed allografts. Results: Twenty-four studies (13 clinical, 11 biomechanical) met inclusion criteria for review. No demonstrable difference in patient-reported outcomes was appreciated between the processing techniques, with the exception of the Tutoplast process. The clinical failure rate of the Tutoplast process was unacceptably high (45% at 6 years), but no other difference was found between other processing techniques (BioCleanse: 5.4%; AlloTrue: 5.7%; MTF: 6.7%). Several studies did show an increased failure rate, but these studies either combined processing techniques or failed to delineate enough detail to allow a specific comparison for this study. The biomechanical studies showed overall maintenance of satisfactory biomechanical properties throughout multiple testing modes with normalization to the percentage of control specimens. Conclusion: A comparison of proprietary allograft processing techniques is difficult because of the variability and lack of specificity of reporting in the current literature. Among the available literature, except for the Tutoplast process, no notable differences were found in the clinical outcomes or biomechanical properties. Future study with a longer follow-up is necessary to determine the role and limitations of these grafts in the clinical setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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19. Successful Return to Sport After Arthroscopic Shoulder Stabilization Versus Nonoperative Management in Contact Athletes With Anterior Shoulder Instability: A Prospective Multicenter Study.
- Author
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Dickens, Jonathan F., Rue, John-Paul, Cameron, Kenneth L., Tokish, John M., Peck, Karen Y., Allred, C. Dain, Svoboda, Steven J., Sullivan, Robert, Kilcoyne, Kelly G., and Owens, Brett D.
- Subjects
SHOULDER injury treatment ,ARTHROSCOPY ,COLLEGE athletes ,PHYSICAL therapy ,DISEASE relapse ,SPORTS participation ,CONTACT sports ,GLENOHUMERAL joint ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: The debate continues regarding the optimal treatment of intercollegiate contact athletes with in-season anterior shoulder instability. Purpose: To examine return to sport and recurrent instability in the season after the index in-season anterior instability event. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2. Methods: Forty-five contact intercollegiate athletes treated nonoperatively or with arthroscopic stabilization were prospectively followed in a multicenter observational study to evaluate return to play (RTP) and recurrent instability in the season after an initial in-season anterior glenohumeral instability event. Baseline data collection included sport played, previous instability events, direction of instability, type of instability (subluxation or dislocation), and treatment method (nonoperative management or arthroscopic stabilization). All nonoperatively treated athletes underwent a standardized accelerated rehabilitation program without shoulder immobilization. Surgical stabilization was performed arthroscopically in all cases, and successful RTP was evaluated during the next competitive season after complete rehabilitation. Results: Thirty-nine of 45 intercollegiate contact athletes had remaining National Collegiate Athletic Association eligibility and were followed through the subsequent competitive season after the index instability event. Of the 10 athletes electing nonoperative treatment, 4 (40%) successfully returned to play without recurrence during the subsequent season. Of the 29 athletes treated surgically, 26 (90%) were able to successfully return to play without recurrence the following season (recurrence: n = 1; inadequate function: n = 2). Athletes who underwent surgical reconstruction before the next season were 5.8 times (95% CI, 1.77-18.97; P = .004) more likely to complete the subsequent season without recurrent instability. Of the 29 athletes electing surgical stabilization, there was no difference (risk ratio, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.10-9.24; P > .99) in RTP between the 9 stabilized after a single instability event (90% RTP rate) and the 20 stabilized after multiple in-season recurrent instability events (89% RTP rate). Conclusion: Collegiate contact and collision athletes with in-season anterior shoulder instability are significantly more likely to successfully return to sport without subsequent instability events the next season if they undergo surgical repair in the off-season. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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20. Posterior Shoulder Instability.
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Antosh, Ivan J., Tokish, John M., and Owens, Brett D.
- Subjects
JOINT hypermobility ,SHOULDER injuries ,JOINT dislocations ,SUBLUXATION ,MILITARY personnel's injuries ,ARTHROSCOPY ,COMPUTED tomography ,RANGE of motion of joints ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,SHOULDER joint ,SHOULDER dislocations ,MILITARY personnel ,DISEASE relapse ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Context: Posterior shoulder instability has become more frequently recognized and treated as a unique subset of shoulder instability, especially in the military. Posterior shoulder pathology may be more difficult to accurately diagnose than its anterior counterpart, and commonly, patients present with complaints of pain rather than instability. "Posterior instability" may encompass both dislocation and subluxation, and the most common presentation is recurrent posterior subluxation. Arthroscopic and open treatment techniques have improved as understanding of posterior shoulder instability has evolved.Evidence Acquisition: Electronic databases including PubMed and MEDLINE were queried for articles relating to posterior shoulder instability.Study Design: Clinical review.Level Of Evidence: Level 4.Results: In low-demand patients, nonoperative treatment of posterior shoulder instability should be considered a first line of treatment and is typically successful. Conservative treatment, however, is commonly unsuccessful in active patients, such as military members. Those patients with persistent shoulder pain, instability, or functional limitations after a trial of conservative treatment may be considered surgical candidates. Arthroscopic posterior shoulder stabilization has demonstrated excellent clinical outcomes, high patient satisfaction, and low complication rates. Advanced techniques may be required in select cases to address bone loss, glenoid dysplasia, or revision.Conclusion: Posterior instability represents about 10% of shoulder instability and has become increasingly recognized and treated in military members. Nonoperative treatment is commonly unsuccessful in active patients, and surgical stabilization can be considered in patients who do not respond. Isolated posterior labral repairs constitute up to 24% of operatively treated labral repairs in a military population. Arthroscopic posterior stabilization is typically considered as first-line surgical treatment, while open techniques may be required in complex or revision settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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21. Anterior Shoulder Instability in the Military Athlete.
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Waterman, Brian, Owens, Brett D., and Tokish, John M.
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SHOULDER injuries ,MILITARY personnel's injuries ,JOINT hypermobility ,BONE grafting ,DISEASE relapse ,ARTHROSCOPY ,ATHLETES ,RANGE of motion of joints ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MILITARY medicine ,SHOULDER joint ,SHOULDER dislocations ,MILITARY personnel ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Context: Given its young, predominately male demographics and intense physical demands, the US military remains an ideal cohort for the study of anterior shoulder instability.Evidence Acquisition: A literature search of PubMed, MEDLINE, and the Cochrane Database was performed to identify all peer-reviewed publications from 1950 to 2016 from US military orthopaedic surgeons focusing on the management of anterior shoulder instability.Study Design: Clinical review.Level Of Evidence: Level 4.Results: The incidence of anterior shoulder instability events in the military occurs at an order of magnitude greater than in civilian populations, with rates as high as 3% per year among high-risk groups. With more than 90% risk of a Bankart lesion and high risk for instability recurrence, the military has advocated for early intervention of first-time shoulder instability while documenting up to 76% relative risk reduction versus nonoperative treatment. Preoperative evaluation with advanced radiographic imaging should be used to evaluate for attritional bone loss or "off-track" engaging defects to guide comprehensive surgical management. With complex recurrent shoulder instability and/or cases of clinically significant osseous lesions, potential options such as remplissage, anterior open capsular procedures, or bone augmentation procedures may be preferentially considered.Conclusion: Careful risk stratification, clinical evaluation, and selective surgical management for at-risk military patients with anterior shoulder instability can optimize the recurrence risk and functional outcome in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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22. Autograft Versus Allograft Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.
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Bottoni, Craig R., Smith, Eric L., Shaha, James, Shaha, Steven S., Raybin, Sarah G., Tokish, John M., and Rowles, Douglas J.
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ANTERIOR cruciate ligament surgery ,ATHLETES ,AUTOGRAFTS ,HOMOGRAFTS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Background: The use of allografts for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction in young athletes is controversial. No long-term results have been published comparing tibialis posterior allografts to hamstring autografts. Purpose: To evaluate the long-term results of primary ACL reconstruction using either an allograft or autograft. Study Design: Randomized controlled trial; Level of evidence, 1. Methods: From June 2002 to August 2003, patients with a symptomatic ACL-deficient knee were randomized to receive either a hamstring autograft or tibialis posterior allograft. All allografts were from a single tissue bank, aseptically processed, and fresh-frozen without terminal irradiation. Graft fixation was identical in all knees. All patients followed the same postoperative rehabilitation protocol, which was blinded to the therapists. Preoperative and postoperative assessments were performed via examination and/or telephone and Internet-based questionnaire to ascertain the functional and subjective status using established knee metrics. The primary outcome measures were graft integrity, subjective knee stability, and functional status. Results: There were 99 patients (100 knees); 86 were men, and 95% were active-duty military. Both groups were similar in demographics and preoperative activity level. The mean and median ages of both groups were identical at 29 and 26 years, respectively. Concomitant meniscal and chondral pathologic abnormalities, microfracture, and meniscal repair performed at the time of reconstruction were similar in both groups. At a minimum of 10 years (range, 120-132 months) from surgery, 96 patients (97 knees) were contacted (2 patients were deceased, and 1 was unable to be located). There were 4 (8.3%) autograft and 13 (26.5%) allograft failures that required revision reconstruction. In the remaining patients whose graft was intact, there was no difference in the mean Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation, Tegner, or International Knee Documentation Committee scores. Conclusion: At a minimum of 10 years after ACL reconstruction in a young athletic population, over 80% of all grafts were intact and had maintained stability. However, those patients who had an allograft failed at a rate over 3 times higher than those with an autograft. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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23. Redefining ''Critical'' Bone Loss in Shoulder Instability.
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Shaha, James S., Cook, Jay B., Song, Daniel J., Rowles, Douglas J., Bottoni, Craig R., Shaha, Steven H., and Tokish, John M.
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of bone diseases ,SHOULDER dislocations ,ARTHROSCOPY ,DISEASE relapse ,COHORT analysis ,FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) ,SHOULDER joint surgery ,BONE resorption ,JOINT hypermobility ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SHOULDER joint ,GLENOHUMERAL joint ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Background: Glenoid bone loss is a common finding in association with anterior shoulder instability. This loss has been identified as a predictor of failure after operative stabilization procedures. Historically, 20% to 25% has been accepted as the "critical" cutoff where glenoid bone loss should be addressed in a primary procedure. Few data are available, however, on lesser, "subcritical" amounts of bone loss (below the 20%-25% range) on functional outcomes and failure rates after primary arthroscopic stabilization for shoulder instability. Purpose: To evaluate the effect of glenoid bone loss, especially in subcritical bone loss (below the 20%-25% range), on outcomes assessments and redislocation rates after an isolated arthroscopic Bankart repair for anterior shoulder instability. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: Subjects were 72 consecutive anterior instability patients (73 shoulders) who underwent isolated anterior arthroscopic labral repair at a single military institution by 1 of 3 sports medicine fellowship-trained orthopaedic surgeons. Data were collected on demographics, the Western Ontario Shoulder Instability (WOSI) score, Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation (SANE) score, and failure rates. Failure was defined as recurrent dislocation. Glenoid bone loss was calculated via a standardized technique on preoperative imaging. The average bone loss across the group was calculated, and patients were divided into quartiles based on the percentage of glenoid bone loss. Outcomes were analyzed for the entire cohort, between the quartiles, and within each quartile. Outcomes were then further stratified between those sustaining a recurrence versus those who remained stable. Results: The mean age at surgery was 26.3 years (range, 20-42 years), and the mean follow-up was 48.3 months (range, 23-58 months). The cohort was divided into quartiles based on bone loss. Quartile 1 (n = 18) had a mean bone loss of 2.8% (range, 0%-7.1%), quartile 2 (n = 19) had 10.4% (range, 7.3%-13.5%), quartile 3 (n = 18) had 16.1% (range, 13.5%-19.8%), and quartile 4 (n = 18) had 24.5% (range, 20.0%-35.5%). The overall mean WOSI score was 756.8 (range, 0-2097). The mean WOSI score correlated with SANE scores and worsened as bone loss increased in each quartile. There were significant differences (P < .05) between quartile 1 (mean WOSI/SANE, 383.3/62.1) and quartile 2 (mean, 594.0/65.2), between quartile 2 and quartile 3 (mean, 839.5/52.0), and between quartile 3 and quartile 4 (mean, 1187.6/46.1). Additionally, between quartiles 2 and 3 (bone loss, 13.5%), the WOSI score increased to rates consistent with a poor clinical outcome. There was an overall failure rate of 12.3%. The percentage of glenoid bone loss was significantly higher among those repairs that failed versus those that remained stable (24.7% vs 12.8%, P < .01). There was no significant difference in failure rate between quartiles 1, 2, and 3, but there was a significant increase in failure (P < .05) between quartiles 1, 2, and 3 (7.3%) when compared with quartile 4 (27.8%). Notably, even when only those patients who did not sustain a recurrent dislocation were compared, bone loss was predictive of outcome as assessed by the WOSI score, with each quartile's increasing bone loss predictive of a worse functional outcome. Conclusion: While critical bone loss has yet to be defined for arthroscopic Bankart reconstruction, our data indicate that "critical" bone loss should be lower than the 20% to 25% threshold often cited. In our population with a high level of mandatory activity, bone loss above 13.5% led to a clinically significant decrease in WOSI scores consistent with an unacceptable outcome, even in patients who did not sustain a recurrence of their instability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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24. Success of High Tibial Osteotomy in the United States Military.
- Author
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Waterman, Brian R., Hoffmann, Jeffrey D., Laughlin, Matthew D., Burks, Robert, Pallis, Mark P., Tokish, John M., and Belmont Jr., Philip J.
- Published
- 2015
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25. Return to Play and Recurrent Instability After In-Season Anterior Shoulder Instability: A Prospective Multicenter Study.
- Author
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Dickens, Jonathan F., Owens, Brett D., Cameron, Kenneth L., Kilcoyne, Kelly, Allred, C. Dain, Svoboda, Steven J., Sullivan, Robert, Tokish, John M., Peck, Karen Y., and Rue, John-Paul
- Subjects
COLLEGE athletes ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,FISHER exact test ,FORECASTING ,JOINT hypermobility ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL rehabilitation ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PROBABILITY theory ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SHOULDER injuries ,SHOULDER dislocations ,SPORTS injuries ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,TIME ,WOUNDS & injuries ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SPORTS participation ,SUBLUXATION ,DATA analysis software ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
The article focuses on the potential of in-season athletes who underwent treatment for treatment for anterior should instability to return to sport, with a focus on the role played by injury factors and patient-reported outcome scores. Topics discussed include the methodology and results of the author's cohort study of 45 contact intercollegiate athletes including percentage of athletes who were able to return to play and the state of their shoulder after their return.
- Published
- 2014
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26. The Mature Athlete’s Shoulder.
- Author
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Tokish, John M.
- Subjects
ROTATOR cuff surgery ,ADHESIVE capsulitis ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,ARTHROPLASTY ,OLDER athletes ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
The article offers information on a study of shoulder disorders of ageing athletes in the U.S. It informs that mature athlete possess several disorders of shoulder including rotator cuff pathology, osteoarthritis, and adhesive capsulitis than younger athletes. The study mentions that the shoulder abnormalities can be treated by arthroplasty.
- Published
- 2014
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27. Pharmacologic Approaches to the Aging Athlete.
- Author
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Tokish, John M. and DeRosa, Daniel C.
- Subjects
ATHLETES' health ,AGING ,PERFORMANCE-enhancing drugs ,BABY boom generation ,HORMONE therapy ,SOMATOTROPIN ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,ERGOGENIC aids - Abstract
As America’s baby boomer population matures, there is an increasing interest in supplements that can delay or oppose the aging process. This antiaging movement has exploded over the past decade. While most supplements are not supported by scientific literature or government controls, a number of products have been the subject of significant scientific inquiry. Hormone replacement therapy, including testosterone and growth hormone, has mixed results, and antioxidative strategies are supported by basic science but lack clinical evidence-based outcomes. While the process of aging has become better understood leading to more rational approaches to combat its effects on health, the clinician is reminded to carefully discern between the science and marketing that is available in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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28. Return to an Athletic Lifestyle After Osteochondral Allograft Transplantation of the Knee.
- Author
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Shaha, James S., Cook, Jay B., Rowles, Douglas J., Bottoni, Craig R., Shaha, Steven H., and Tokish, John M.
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ARTICULAR cartilage ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,EMPLOYMENT reentry ,EMPLOYMENT of people with disabilities ,HOMOGRAFTS ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,JOB descriptions ,MILITARY hospitals ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,REOPERATION ,MILITARY personnel ,STATISTICS ,ARTICULAR cartilage injuries ,DATA analysis ,SPORTS participation ,BODY mass index ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. - Abstract
Background: Osteochondral allograft transplantation (OATS) is a treatment option that provides the ability to restore large areasof hyaline cartilage anatomy and structure without donor site morbidity and promising results have been reported in returningpatients to some previous activities. However, no study has reported on the durability of return to activity in a setting where itis an occupational requirement.Hypothesis: Osteochondral allograft transplantation is less successful in returning patients to activity in a population in whichphysical fitness is a job requirement as opposed to a recreational goal.Study Design: Case series; Level of evidence, 4.Methods: A retrospective review was conducted of 38 consecutive OATS procedures performed at a single military institution by1 of 4 sports medicine fellowship–trained orthopaedic surgeons. All patients were on active duty at the time of the index procedure,and data were collected on demographics, return to duty, Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS), and ultimateeffect on military duty. Success was defined as the ability to return to the preinjury military occupational specialty (MOS) withno duty-limiting restrictions.Results: The mean lesion size treated was 487.0 ± 178.7 mm
2 . The overall rate of return to full duty was 28.9% (11/38). An additional28.9% (11/38) were able to return to limited activity with permanent duty modifications. An alarming 42.1% (16/38) wereunable to return to military activity because of their operative knee. When analyzed for return to sport, only 5.3% (2/38) of patientswere able to return to their preinjury level. Eleven patients underwent concomitant procedures. Statistical power was maintainedby analyzing data in aggregate for cases with versus without concomitant procedures. When the 11 undergoing concomitant procedureswere removed from the data set, the rate of return to full activity was 33.3% (9/27), with 22.3% (6/27) returning to limitedactivity and 44.4% (12/27) unable to return to activity. In this subset, 7.4% (2/27) were able to return to a preinjury level of sport.The KOOS values were significantly higher in the full activity group when compared with the limited and no activity groups (P<.01). Branch of service was a significant predictor of outcome, with Marine Corps and Navy service members more likely to returnto full activity compared with Army and Air Force members. A MOS of combat arms was a significant predictor of a poor outcome.All patients demonstrated postoperative healing of their grafts as documented in their medical chart, and no patient in the seriesrequired revision for problems with graft incorporation.Conclusion: Osteochondral allograft transplantation for the treatment of large chondral defects in the knee met with disappointingresults in an active-duty population and was even less reliable in returning this population to preinjury sport levels. Branch ofservice and occupational type predicted the return to duty, but other traditional predictors of outcome such as rank and years ofservice did not. The presence of concomitant procedures did not have an effect on outcome with respect to activity or sport levelwith the numbers available for analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
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29. Clavicular Bone Tunnel Malposition Leads to Early Failures in Coracoclavicular Ligament Reconstructions.
- Author
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Cook, Jay B., Shaha, James S., Rowles, Douglas J., Bottoni, Craig R., Shaha, Steven H., and Tokish, John M.
- Subjects
LIGAMENT surgery ,TENDON transplantation ,ACROMIOCLAVICULAR joint ,PLASTIC surgery ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,CLAVICLE ,JOINT dislocations ,EMPLOYMENT reentry ,FORECASTING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PICTURE archiving & communication systems ,RESEARCH evaluation ,MILITARY personnel ,T-test (Statistics) ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,INTER-observer reliability ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANATOMY ,WOUNDS & injuries - Abstract
The article evaluates the effects of clavicular tunnel position in coracoclavicular (CC) ligament reconstruction. A study conducted a retrospective review of consecutive series of CC ligament reconstructions performed with two clavicular bone tunnels and a free tendon graft. Comparison of bone tunnel position showed that medialized bone tunnels were a significant predictor for early loss of reduction for the conoid and trapezoid bone tunnels.
- Published
- 2013
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30. Ergogenic Aids: A Review of Basic Science, Performance, Side Effects, and Status in Sports.
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Tokish, John M., Kocher, Mininder S., and Hawkins, Richard J.
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- *
SPORTS , *PHARMACODYNAMICS , *MEDICINE , *PHYSICAL fitness , *ATHLETES , *ANDROSTENEDIONE - Abstract
The use of drugs and supplements to enhance performance has become a part of mainstream athletics. Many team physicians and sports medicine practitioners are unfamiliar with the benefits and risks of these products and thus are unable to educate young athletes on this topic. In spite of numerous reports on the health risks of anabolic steroid use, 1 to 3 million Americans have used them. Human growth hormone has been tried by up to 5% of 10th graders, although no scientific study has shown that it is an effective performance-enhancing drug. Amphetamines and similar compounds may be the most widely abused drug in baseball; recently, they have come under increased scrutiny in sport. Erythropoietin is a highly effective aerobic enhancer that has been linked to multiple deaths in cyclists and other endurance athletes. The neutraceutical industry, led by supplements such as creatine, ephedra, and androstenedione, remains unregulated by the Food and Drug Administration and has serious issues with quality and side effects. An understanding of these products is essential for the sports medicine practitioner to provide sound, safe advice to the athlete. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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31. Subscapularis Muscle Activity during Selected Rehabilitation Exercises.
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Decker, Michael J., Tokish, John M., Ellis, Henry B., Torry, Michael R., and Hawkins, Richard J.
- Subjects
- *
MUSCLES , *EXERCISE - Abstract
Presents a study which examined the muscle activity of the upper and lower portions of the subscapularies muscle during several resistance exercises that target this muscle. Materials and methods; Results; Discussion.
- Published
- 2003
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32. Aircast Award for Basic Science - Return to Play Following In-season Anterior Shoulder Instability: A Prospective Multicenter Study.
- Author
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Dickens, Jonathan F., Owens, Brett D., Cameron, Kenneth L., Kilcoyne, Kelly G., Allred, C. Dain, Svoboda, Steven J., Sullivan, Robert T., Tokish, John M., Peck, Karen Y., and Rue, John Paul H.
- Published
- 2014
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33. Heads Up Football Training Decreases Concussion Rates in High School Football Players.
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Tokish, John M., Shanley, Ellen, Kissenberth, Michael J., Brooks, John, Nance, Darryl, Gilliland, R. Gil, and Thorpe, John
- Published
- 2017
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34. Prospective Evaluation of Range of Motion in Acute ACL Reconstruction Using Patellar Tendon Autograft.
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Harris, Mitchell C., Venrick, Connor, Hines, Adam C., Cook, Jay B., Rowles, Douglas J., Tokish, John M., and Bottoni, Craig R.
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- 2019
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35. Using Stress Ultrasonography to Understand the Risk of UCL Injury Among Professional Baseball Pitchers Based on Ligament Morphology and Dynamic Abnormalities.
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Shanley, Ellen, Smith, Matthew, Mayer, Braden K., Bailey, Lane Brooks, Thigpen, Charles A., Tokish, John M., Kissenberth, Michael J., and Noonan, Thomas J.
- Published
- 2018
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36. Reduction of Hip Arthroscopy Post-Operative Pain Using Ultrasound-guided Fascia-Iliaca Block: A Prospective Randomized Control Trial.
- Author
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Glomset, John Larson, Kim, Eugene J., Tokish, John M., Renfro, Suzanne D., Seckel, Tyler B., Adams, Kyle J., and Folk, Jason
- Published
- 2018
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37. Arthroscopic Superior Capsular Reconstruction in Males Provides Superior Outcomes to Reverse Total Shoulder or Debridement for Irreparable Rotator Cuff Tears.
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Tokish, John M., Kissenberth, Michael J., Shanley, Ellen, Tolan, Stefan John, Adams, Kyle J., Alexander, Ryan, Babrowicz, Sarah A., Hawkins, Richard J., and Thigpen, Charles A.
- Published
- 2018
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38. High Tibial Osteotomy Performed With All-PEEK Implants Demonstrates Similar Outcomes but Less Hardware Removal at Minimum 2-Year Follow-up Compared With Metal Plates.
- Author
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Roberson, Troy A., Momaya, Amit M., Adams, Kyle, Long, Catherine D., Tokish, John M., and Wyland, Douglas J.
- Published
- 2018
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39. Preoperative Ultrasonography Is Unreliable in Predicting Hamstring Tendon Graft Diameter for ACL Reconstruction.
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Momaya, Amit M., Beicker, Clint, Siffri, Paul, Kissenberth, Michael J., Backes, Jeffrey, Bailey, Lane, Rulewicz, Gabriel J., Mercuri, Jennifer M., Shealy, E. Carlisle, Tokish, John M., and Thigpen, Charles A.
- Published
- 2018
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40. Generalized Joint Hyper Mobility is not Associated with the Development of Overuse Arm Injuries in Adolescent Baseball Pitchers.
- Author
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Tokish, John M., Shanley, Ellen, Bailey, Lane Brooks, Kissenberth, Michael J., Sease, Wayne F., Hawkins, Richard J., and Thigpen, Charles A.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Treatment of Biceps Lesions in the Setting of the Rotator Cuff Repair: When is Tenodesis Superior to Tenotomy?
- Author
-
Tokish, John M., Tolan, Stefan John, Lee, Julia, Shelley, Christina, Swinehart, S. Dane, Lonergan, Keith T., Kissenberth, Michael J., Hawkins, Richard J., and Thigpen, Charles A.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Return to Sport as Outcome Measure for Shoulder Instability: Surprising Findings in Non- Operative Management in a High School Athlete Population.
- Author
-
Shanley, Ellen, Tokish, John M., Thigpen, Charles A., Ruffrage, Lauren, Wyland, Douglas J., and Kissenberth, Michael J.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Validity and Responsiveness of the Single Alpha-numeric Evaluation (sane) for Shoulder Patients.
- Author
-
Thigpen, Charles A., Shanley, Ellen, Tokish, John M., Kissenberth, Michael J., Tolan, Stefan John, and Hawkins, Richard J.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Preoperative Resilience Strongest Predictor of Postoperative Outcome Following an Arthroscopic Bankart Repair.
- Author
-
Shaha, James S., Shaha, Steven H., Bottoni, Craig R., Song, Daniel J., and Tokish, John M.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Predictive Value and Clinical Validation of the “On-Track” vs. “Off-Track” Concept in Bipolar Bone Loss in Anterior Glenohumeral Instability.
- Author
-
Tokish, John M., Shaha, James S., Cook, Jay B., Rowles, Douglas J., Shaha, Steven H., and Bottoni, Craig R.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Displacement of the Clavicle is a Better Predictor of Surgical Intervention in the Non-Operatively Treated Acromioclavicular Dislocation than the Increase in Coracoclavicular Distance.
- Author
-
Krul, Kevin P., Cook, Jay B., Cage, J. Matthew, Rowles, Douglas J., Bottoni, Craig R., and Tokish, John M.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Improved Return to Play in Intercollegiate Contact Athletes following Arthroscopic Stabilization for Anterior Shoulder Instability.
- Author
-
Dickens, Jonathan F., Rue, John Paul H., Cameron, Kenneth L., Kilcoyne, Kelly G., Allred, C. Dain, Svoboda, Steven J., Sullivan, Robert T., Tokish, John M., Peck, Karen Y., and Owens, Brett D.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Displacement of the Clavicle is a Better Predictor of Surgical Intervention in the Non-Operatively Treated Acromioclavicular Dislocation than the Increase in Coracoclavicular Distance.
- Author
-
Krul, Kevin P., Cook, Jay B., Cage, J. Matthew, Rowles, Douglas J., Bottoni, Craig R., and Tokish, John M.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Predictive Value and Clinical Validation of the “On-Track” vs. “Off-Track” Concept in Bipolar Bone Loss in Anterior Glenohumeral Instability.
- Author
-
Tokish, John M., Shaha, James S., Cook, Jay B., Rowles, Douglas J., Shaha, Steven H., and Bottoni, Craig R.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Improved Return to Play in Intercollegiate Contact Athletes following Arthroscopic Stabilization for Anterior Shoulder Instability.
- Author
-
Dickens, Jonathan F., Rue, John Paul H., Cameron, Kenneth L., Kilcoyne, Kelly G., Allred, C. Dain, Svoboda, Steven J., Sullivan, Robert T., Tokish, John M., Peck, Karen Y., and Owens, Brett D.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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