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2022 AOSSM Annual Meeting Recordings with CME
Q & A: SLARD: Sports Specific Lower Extremity Inj ...
Q & A: SLARD: Sports Specific Lower Extremity Injuries
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Video Transcription
We got some time for questions because Dr. Ortega didn't make it and maybe if someone wants to make any and if not I will ask Lucio. Do you have a role on biologics on the hamstring injury in elite athletes? But if you do, you would like it or you think that it's... Matias, do you have any thoughts about that? If you have a request, I don't know if it's one week or more, but I think if you have a place... Manu, do you have anything to say? Something to say, Manuel? No, the same as Matias. In that case, it would be useful, but not always. It depends on the patient. Ok, what are your thoughts of who of your military people do PCL in an acute setting? In the military population, when you do a PCL reconstruction in an acute setting? Do you have any Lucio role for PCL in acute setting in the football players? What are you doing in this kind of players? I have a professional soccer player in a PCL. It's quite rare in a soccer player setting. I have a professional, sorry. In non-professional cases, I have a few. One in the brain, one in the brain, two in the brain, just keep them non-surgical. Matias, you have described a lot of different type of procedures in cartilage lesions. So, Rick, you got any clue for how to return them to sports? Even there are so many different... What are your key feelings about how do they return to sport and what are your measures in cartilage lesions? You seek MRI. What do you do? I think it depends on which technique do you use to return to sport. Generally, we think that pain is clinically very important to return. MRI is a standard image to see how is the post-op or with the help of technique. If you do just a tracheostomy, the next day you can see better the MRI. So, functionally, the test is very important to decide when you return to sports. This is a little cohort of a bigger one, so we got a lot of other guys also. But I tend to do it quite early because, as I mentioned, it's better to have the rehab, the multi-regulatory knee early. So, if it's complete, I do it three months or even earlier. Okay. Well, if you don't have any more questions, you can move on.
Video Summary
This video is a Q&A session with multiple participants discussing various topics related to sports injuries. Dr. Ortega is absent, so questions are directed towards other participants, including Lucio and Matias. The discussion covers hamstring injuries in elite athletes, the role of biologics, and PCL reconstruction in military and soccer players. They also discuss different procedures for cartilage lesions and the importance of pain and MRI scans in determining the return to sports. The video is part of a larger cohort, with the participants emphasizing early rehabilitation and the multimodal approach to knee injuries.
Asset Caption
Lucio Ernlund, MD, MSc; Manuel Perez Zabala, MD; Alejandro Leonardo Ortega; Matias Costa-Paz, PhD, MD; Daniel Slullitel, MD PROF
Keywords
sports injuries
hamstring injuries
biologics
PCL reconstruction
cartilage lesions
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