Most Viewed Abstracts
1. Report Shows Shift in Starting Salaries for Physicians 2. Rapid correction of low vitamin D status in nursing home residents 3. 2008 Exclusive Survey—Earnings: Good news for primary care income 4. Medicare pay-for-reporting effort draws fire from frustrated doctors 5. Debunking Myths in the US Healthcare System
Your Article Summary
The application of shock waves in orthopedic and rheumatologic diseases
Modern Rheumatology, 06/19/09
Buch M et al. – Article gives a mini review of the application of shock waves in orthopedics.
- Shock wave therapy (SWT) is used for the 4 main indications:
- Non-union of fractures
- Calcareous tendinitis
- Lateral epicondylitis and
- Plantar faciitis
- SWT is used in non-unions since the early 1990s; rate of success varies between 56 and 90% of bony union
- In pts with calcifications of the rotator cuff, shock wave therapy is used as a last step before operating
- Microfracturing of the deposit and a rupture of the pseudomembrane surrounding the calcification explain this effect
- Disintegration of the deposit can be seen in 73% in 6 wks
- Positive effects in chronic cases of enthesopathies (plantar fasciitis, epicondylitis) are explained by:
- Improvement in blood supply
- Alterations in the neuronal cell membrane and
- Gate control theory
- In chronic cases, when other conservative therapy modalities have failed and pts are sent to surgery, positive results can be achieved in 81% (heel spur) and 69% (epicondylitis)
Related Articles
A Randomized, Double-Blind Trial to Compare Shock Wave Frequencies of 60 and 120 Shocks per Minute for Upper Ureteral Stones
The Journal of Urology, 10/01/09
Relevance Score: 69%
Extracorporeal Shock-Wave Therapy Compared with Surgery for Hypertrophic Long-Bone Nonunions
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 11/18/09
Relevance Score: 68%
The management of ureteric calculi without extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy
Irish Journal of Medical Science, 10/21/09
Relevance Score: 64%
Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) versus percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) or retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS) for kidney stones
Cochrane Reviews, 10/19/09
Relevance Score: 64%
A Prospective Randomized Study Comparing Shock Wave Lithotripsy and Semirigid Ureteroscopy for the Management of Proximal Ureteral Calculi
Urology, 10/12/09
Relevance Score: 64%
Today in Bone Metabolism...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
The Role of Quantitative Bone Scanning in the Assessment of Bone Turnover in Patients with Charcot Foot
Diabetes Care, 11/25/09
Assessment of Regional Changes in Skeletal Metabolism Following 3 and 18 Months of Teriparatide Treatment
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 11/25/09
Relationship Between Genotype and Skeletal Phenotype in Children and Adolescents With Osteogenesis Imperfecta
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 11/25/09
Article Search
Sponsor


See Latest Articles


