Results 231 to 240 of about 39,211 (294)
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Ulnar Collateral Ligament Reconstruction
Clinics in Sports Medicine, 2020Ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) injuries can significantly impair the overhead athlete. Reconstruction of the anterior bundle of the UCL (UCL-R) has allowed a high proportion of these individuals to return to their previous level of play. Several techniques for UCL-R are described that produce acceptable results with an overall low complication rate ...
Edward Lyle, Cain, Mims G, Ochsner
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Ulnar Collateral Ligament Reconstruction
Hand Clinics, 2008Since the first description of an ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) tear at the elbow 60 years ago and the first description of surgical reconstruction 20 years ago, many advances have been made in management and surgery. UCL tears at the elbow remain a disease of the overhead athlete.
Alex, Meyers +2 more
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Tibial collateral ligament bursitis
The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 1988In 91 patients evaluated between 1982 and 1985, tibial collateral ligament bursitis was diagnosed. This entity has not been described since the work of Brantigan and Voshell in 1943. The diagnosis was based on the findings of tenderness over the tibial collateral ligament at the joint line, without a history of mechanical symp toms. With a nonsurgical
R K, Kerlan, R E, Glousman
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Ulnar Collateral Ligament Repair
Orthopedic Clinics of North America, 2019The anterior bundle of the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) is the primary restraint to valgus force at the elbow, especially during the arm-cocking and arm-acceleration phases of the overheard throwing cycle. Injuries of the UCL can range from partial thickness tears, end avulsions, to chronic attritional ruptures with poor tissue quality.
A Ryves, Moore +2 more
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Seminars in Musculoskeletal Radiology, 1998
The collateral ligaments of the elbow are responsible for stability in response to varus and valgus stress. Injury to the collateral ligaments can be acute, but it is usually due to repetitive microtrauma. In the general population, collateral ligament injury is rare, but in the appropriate individual with the proper forces applied to the elbow, this ...
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The collateral ligaments of the elbow are responsible for stability in response to varus and valgus stress. Injury to the collateral ligaments can be acute, but it is usually due to repetitive microtrauma. In the general population, collateral ligament injury is rare, but in the appropriate individual with the proper forces applied to the elbow, this ...
openaire +2 more sources
Elbow Lateral Collateral Ligament Injuries
The Journal of Hand Surgery, 2013The lateral collateral ligament (LCL) of the elbow is a complex capsuloligamentous structure critical in stabilizing the ulnohumeral and radiocapitellar articulations. LCL injury can result in elbow instability, allowing the proximal radius and ulna to externally rotate away from the humerus as a supination stress is applied to the forearm.
Lee M, Reichel +4 more
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