"Eleven months ago, Isringhausen slumped at his locker, admitting, "I can't keep going like this." Saturday, he could think of nothing better. Isringhausen didn't require a full hip replacement. Instead, doctors shaved bone from the neck of his femur, allowing him greater flexibility with his left leg." -Joe Stauss, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, August 2007
Jason Isringhausen underwent femoral osteotomy for femoral acetabular impingement last year. It was his second surgery. I can only assume his 1st surgery was to repair a labral tear. Now he is playing baseball, can't beat that (for a n=1 non-matched- non-blinded -non-randomized clinical study).
In was in medical school (my friends agree) I never heard FAI. Now the literature suggests it affects up to 60% of patients receiving hip replacements in older age.
In the 1970's cardiologists were newly diagnosing mitral valve prolapse as thought it was a disorder of epidemic proportions. Years of further study revealed that actual morbidity associated with MVP is very low- and the diagnosis has fallen out of favor. Conversely, the first patients receiving the (arterial) LIMA grafts at bypass did not know what the clinical trials would show...... however now it is proven standard of care. Thousands of lives have been saved by this surgery.
A favorite attending in my training program says about new medical techniques and technology,
"Be not the first, yet be not the last."
Thursday, August 23, 2007
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