Arthroscopically-Assisted Medial Collateral Ligament Repair of Proximal Tears with Inside-out Suture Technique. [PDF]
Tao CL +4 more
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Is the Lind or LaPrade Technique Able to Control Anterior and Rotational Laxity in Medial-Side Knee Injuries? A Controlled Laboratory Study of 18 Knees. [PDF]
Drouineau M +4 more
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Management of a Rare Combined Osseoligamentous Knee Injury: Tibial Plateau Fracture with High-Grade Posterior Cruciate Ligament Tear Treated by Arthroscopic Reconstruction and Osteosynthesis - A Case Report. [PDF]
Vivekkumar M +5 more
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Assessing Medial Collateral Ligament Knee Lesions in General Practice
American Journal of Medicine, 2008To assess the diagnostic value of history-taking and physical examination of medial collateral ligament lesions after a knee injury presenting in general practice.Patients aged 18 to 65 years with a traumatic knee injury who consulted their general practitioner within 5 weeks after trauma filled out a questionnaire, underwent a standardized physical ...
Jan A N Verhaar, Bart w Koes
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Medial Collateral Ligament Injuries of the Knee
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1978Isolated MCL I and MCL II lesions evidence good recovery of integrity and function under non-operative modes of treatment. Isolated MCL III lesions may also be treated by non-operative management, but with the expectation of a slightly less successful result.
J F, Fetto, J L, Marshall
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Variations in the examination of the medial collateral ligament of the knee
Clinical Biomechanics, 1987Five male patients with resolving moderately severe media collateral ligament injuries of the knee and five uninjured males were examined for knee ligament laxity by three examiners. The examiners were unaware of the identity of the subjects. The examiners had good intra-observer repeatibility, but there was poor agreement between examiners.
M H, Pope +3 more
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Injuries to the Medial Collateral Ligament and Associated Medial Structures of the Knee
The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American Volume, 2010*The superficial medial collateral ligament and other medial knee stabilizers-i.e., the deep medial collateral ligament and the posterior oblique ligament-are the most commonly injured ligamentous structures of the knee. *The main structures of the medial aspect of the knee are the proximal and distal divisions of the superficial medial collateral ...
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