Title | Minimally Invasive Total Joint Arthroplasty [electronic resource] / edited by William J. Hozack, Martin Krismer, Michael Nogler, Peter M. Bonutti, Franz Rachbauer, Jonathan L. Schaffer, William J. Donnelly |
---|---|
Imprint | Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2004 |
Connect to | http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-59298-0 |
Descript | XII, 342 p. online resource |
I Is There a Need for Minimally Invasive Approaches in Total Joint Arthroplasty? -- 1 Rehabilitation after Minimally Invasive Surgery -- 2 Treatment and Rehabilitation Concepts โ USA -- 3 Treatment and Rehabilitation Concepts in Europe -- 4 Treatment and Rehabilitation Concepts โ Asian Pacific -- II The Hip -- 5 Principles and History of Total Hip Arthroplasty -- 6 Traditional Approaches to the Hip -- 6.1 Direct Anterior Approach to the Hip -- 6.2 Modified Direct Lateral Approach -- 6.3 An Extensile Posterior Exposure for Primary and Revision Hip Arthroplasty -- 7 Minimally Invasive Approaches to the Hip -- 7.1 Direct, Anterior, Single-Incision Approach -- 7.2 Minimally Invasive Single-Incision Anterior Approach for Total Hip Arthroplasty โ Early Results -- 7.3 The Direct Anterior Approach -- 7.4 Anterolateral Mini-Incision Surgical Technique -- 7.5 Posterior Approach for MIS with Image-Free Computer-Assisted Navigation -- 7.6 Posterior Approach with Minimal Invasive Surgery Utilizing Hip Navigation -- 7.6.1 Posterior Minimally Invasive Total Hip Arthroplasty Using the Stryker HipNav Navigation System -- 7.7 Single, Posterolateral, Mini-Incision Approach to the Hip -- 7.7.1 Tissue-Preserving, Minimally Invasive Total Hip Arthroplasty Using a Superior Capsulotomy -- 7.8 Minimally Invasive Total Hip Arthroplasty Using the Two-Incision Approach -- 7.9 Anterior Double Incision -- 7.10 Anterior Double-Incision Lateral Decubitus Approach -- 7.11 Minimally Invasive Approach to Metal-on-Metal Resurfacing Hip Arthroplasty -- III The Knee -- 8 The Standard Anterior Medial Parapatellar Approach to TKA -- 9 Minimally Invasive Approaches to the Knee -- 9.1 Minimally Invasive Total Knee Arthroplasty โ Midvastus Approach -- 9.2 The Subvastus Approach in Total Knee Arthroplasty -- 9.3 Lateral Approach to Total Knee Arthroplasty: Minimal Soft Tissue Invasion -- 9.4 Clinical Experiences with the Unicondylar Knee Arthroplasty -- 9.5 Unicondylar Minimally Invasive Approach to Knee Arthritis -- 9.5.1 Unicondylar Minimally Invasive -- IV Minimally Invasive total Joint Arthroplasty and Computer Assisted Surgery -- 10 How Can CAOS Support MIS TKR and THR? โ Background and Significance -- 11 CT-based Navigation for Knees and Hips in Minimally Invasive Surgery -- 12 Direct Anterior Approach Using Image-Free Navigation -- 13 Double-Incision and Mini-Posterior Total Hip Arthroplasty Using Imageless Navigation -- 14 Image-Free Navigation for TKA โ Surgical Technique -- 15 Image-Free Navigation for Total Knee Arthroplasty -- 16 Computer-Assisted Minimally Invasive Total Knee Arthroplasty -- 17 CAOS as an Adjunct to MIS โ the Ideal Partnership in Performing Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty -- 18 Freehand Navigation For Bone Shaping -- 19 Is There a Place for Robotics in Minimally Invasive TJA? -- 20 How has Computer-Navigation changed TKR? -- V Evaluation of MITJA -- 21 MIS in Total Hip Arthroplasty: Present Status and Future Direction -- 22 Concepts of Clinical Studies -- 23 Scoring Systems for the Comparison of International Data โ Hips and Knees -- VI Perspectives โ The Hip -- 24 Is Minimally Invasive Hip Replacement a Winning Concept? -- 25 One Universal Approach โ or a Split World? -- 26 What Instruments Do We Need? -- 27 Are New Implant Designs Required for MIS? -- VII Perspectives โ The Knee -- 28 Is Minimally Invasive Total Knee Arthroplasty a Winning Concept? -- 29 Minimally Invasive Total Knee Arthroplasty โ What Instruments Do We Need? -- 30 Do We Need New Implant Designs? -- VIII Perspectives on MIS and CAOS -- 31 Introducing New Surgical Technologies -- 32 Complications of Total Hip and Total Knee Arthroplasty: Lessons Learned -- 33 Minimally Invasive Total Joint Arthroplasty and Direct-to-Consumer Advertising -- 34 Ethics and Minimal Incision Total Joint Arthroplasty -- 35 Is MIS a Faulty Paradigm? -- 36 Perspective on MIS and CAOS: What Can the Engineer Do for These Concepts? -- 37 How Should We teach MIS? -- 38 CAS as a Training Tool for MIS