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- BookGazi Huri, Filippo Familiari, Young Lae Moon, Mahmut Nedim Doral, Giulio Maria Marcheggiani Muccioli, editors.Summary: This book describes and evaluates techniques and devices used in shoulder arthroplasty with a view to enabling readers to improve their surgical practice. After an opening section on basic knowledge, including surgical anatomy, key issues in total shoulder arthroplasty and reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (RTSA) are considered in detail. Among the topics covered are biomechanics, cemented versus cementless humeral fixation, the comparative merits of humeral components featuring short stem and stemless designs and of pegged and keeled glenoid components, the influence of humeral inclination in RTSA, and the avoidance and management of unstable RTSA. An entire section is then devoted to the description and illustration of valuable surgical tips and tricks. Arthroplasty for acute proximal humerus fractures is considered separately, again addressing important aspects of technique and current controversies. The book is an outcome of a workshop held by the international Shoulder Club, formed at Hacettepe University in Ankara in 2015 with the aim of bringing together leading authorities in the field and young orthopedic surgeons and students from across the world in order to disseminate expertise and exchange ideas.
Contents:
Chapter 1. Shoulder anatomy
Chapter 2. Axillary Nerve Palsy
Chapter 3. Deltopectoral approach
Chapter 4. Biomechanics of RTSA
Chapter 5. Anatomic Shoulder Arthroplasty: Causes and Indications to Surgery
Chapter 6. Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: Principles and Biomechanics
Chapter 7. Unstable Reverse Total Shoulder Arthoplasty How to Avoid and Manage
Chapter 8. Keeled or Pegged Polyethylene Glenoid Componenets
Chapter 9. Genral Principals of Rehabilitation Following Shoulder Surgery
Chapter 10. Rehabilitation after Shoulder Arthroplasty. Chapter 11. Indications for Reverse Shoulder Arthroplasty
Chapter 12. Stemless RTSA
Chapter 13. Massive, irreparable rotator cuff tears treated with an arthroscopic-assisted latissimus dorsi tendon transfer: Indications, surgical technique, and outcomes
Chapter 14. Fundamentals in Shoulder Radiology
Chapter 15. Shoulder Arthroplasty: Pain Management
Chapter 16. Shoulder Arthroplasty in the Treatment of Proximal Humeral Fractures
Chapter 17. Operative technique of angular stable plate fixation
Chapter 18. Complications of ORIF in proximal humeral fractures
Chapter 19. Acromioclavicular Joint Injuries
Chapter 20. Complications of Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty. - ArticleKirch W, Distler A.Int J Clin Pharmacol Biopharm. 1978 Mar;16(3):132-5.Sixteen patients with essential hypertension were treated with N-Amidino-2-(2,6-dichlorophenyl) acetamide hydrochloride (BS 100--141) and clonidine for five weeks each in a double-blind cross-over trial. Dosage ranged from 2 to 6 mg BS 100--141 and from 0.3 to 0.9 mg clonidine daily in two or three divided doses. Both compounds caused a significant and comparable fall in blood pressure. Patients whose blood pressure was not reduced to normal levels by 2 to 3 mg BS 100--141 daily did not respond better to an increase in the dose. Dry mouth and constipation occurred about equally frequently with both agents, but sedation and orthostatic circulatory effects were considerably more frequent with clonidine. Rebound hypertension likewise occurred in five patients following clonidine withdrawal as opposed to no patient after BS 100-141.