Experts on osteochondritis dissecans explain the best methods for clinical evaluation and diagnosis, as well as surgical treatment options for skeletally immature and skeletally mature patients. Although osteochondritis dissecans occurs mostly in the knee, chapters also discuss osteochondritis dissecans in the elbow and talus.
1. Etiology, Incidence, and Histology, Kevin G. Shea, MD, John C. Jacobs, Jr., BS, and Jeffrey I. Kessler, MD 2. Clinical Evaluation and Diagnostic Studies, Jennifer M. Weiss, MD, and Nathan L. Grimm, MD 3. OCD in the Knee:: Treatment Algorithm, James L. Carey, MD, MPH, and Theodore J. Ganley, MD 4. OCD in the Immature Knee:: Stable Nonsurgical Treatment, Eric J. Wall, MD, Amy E. Pohlman, BS, and Gregory D. Myer, PhD 5. OCD in the Immature Knee:: Stable Drilling, M. Lucas Murnaghan, MD, Med, FRCSC, and Eric W. Edmonds, MD 6. OCD in the Immature Knee:: Unstable Fixation, Theodore J. Ganley, MD, Nathan L. Grimm, MD, and James L. Carey, MD, MPH 7. OCD in the Skeletally Mature Knee:: Salvageable Fragment Fixation with Bone Grafting, James L. Carey, MD, and Nathan L. Grimm, MD 8. OCD in the Mature Knee:: Unsalvageable Cartilage Repair, Chondroplasty, and Loose Body Removal, John D. Polousky, MD, and Allen F. Anderson, MD 9. OCD in the Elbow, Carl W. Nissen, MD 10. OCD in the Talus, Brian P. Scannell, MD, and Henry G. Chambers, MD
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