Oxford textbook of trauma and orthopaedics
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Oxford textbook of trauma and orthopaedics
(Oxford textbooks in surgery)
Oxford University Press, 2011
2nd ed
- Other Title
-
Oxford textbook of orthopedics and trauma
Available at 2 libraries
  Aomori
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Note
Rev. ed. of: Oxford textbook of orthopedics and trauma. 2002
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Oxford Textbook of Trauma and Orthopaedics second edition provides comprehensive coverage of the relevant background science, theory, practice, decision-making skills and operative techniques required to provide modern orthopaedic and trauma care. The text is divided into five major sections covering fundamental science, adult orthopaedics, trauma, paediatric orthopaedics, and paediatric trauma, including a major subsection on tumours. Additionally, the adult orthopaedics section is further sub divided to cover the joint and bone systems of the body. Edited by a transatlantic team with more than 300 specialist contributors, the second edition of this award-winning textbook is unrivalled in the field. The content is extensively referenced, highly illustrated and contains useful summary boxes throughout the text. This new edition has been completely revised; it now fits snugly into one volume and contains all the information needed by a trainee taking the FRCS (trauma and orthopaedics), or an equivalent exam.
The topics covered are based on the British Orthopaedic Associaton curriculum so it is comprehensive and highly relevant to trainees and teaching consultants wishing to keep up to date with current practice and thinking. References have been condensed to a list of important 'Further Reading'. Illustrations are plentiful, while summary boxes on every page allow the reader to check the key points in every chapter during revision. For the first time the printed text is complemented by a fully searchable online version that provides active links through to primary research papers, and images in the book can be downloaded to PowerPoint slides for teaching and presentation purposes. Individual purchasers of the print edition of the Oxford Textbook of Trauma and Orthopaedics are entitled to six months' free access to the online version.
Table of Contents
- SECTION 1
- 1.1 Foundations of clinical practice
- 1.2 Classification and outcome measures
- 1.3 The musculoskeletal system: structure and function
- 1.4 Injury and repair
- 1.5 Haemoglobinopathies
- 1.6 Prevention of thrombosis in orthopaedic surgery
- 1.7 Pain and its control
- 1.8 Biomechanics
- 1.9 Gait analysis
- 1.10 Imaging
- 1.11 Complex regional pain syndrome
- 1.12 Neuromuscular disorders
- 1.13 Neuromuscular and skeletal manifestations of neurofibromatosis
- SECTION 2
- 2.1 Choice of surgery for tumour: Staging and surgical margins
- 2.2 Amputations, endoprosthetic joint replacement, massive bone replacement, other alternatives
- 2.3 Benign tumours of soft tissues
- 2.4 Malignant tumours of soft tissues
- 2.5 Benign bone tumours
- 2.6 Malignant bone tumours
- 2.7 Metastatic bone disease
- SECTION 3
- 3.1 Cervical spine disorders
- 3.2 Degenerative disease of the thoracic spine
- 3.3 Clinical presentations of the lumbar spine
- 3.4 Non-operative management of non-specific low back pain types 1 and 2
- 3.5 Cauda equina syndrome
- 3.6 Surgical management of chronic low back pain
- 3.7 Management of nerve root pain (syn: sciatica, radicular pain)
- 3.8 Management of neurogenic claudication and spinal stenosis
- 3.9 Clinical presentation of spinal deformities
- 3.10 Idiopathic scoliosis
- 3.11 Congenital scoliosis and kyphosis
- 3.12 Neuromuscular scoliosis
- 3.13 Syndromal scoliosis
- 3.14 Brace treatment in idiopathic scoliosis: the case for treatment
- 3.15 Iatrogenic spinal deformity
- 3.16 Kyphosis
- 3.17 Spondylolisthesis and spondylolysis
- 3.18 The infected spine
- 3.19 Cross-sectional imaging in spinal disorders
- SECTION 4
- 4.1 The clinical evaluation of the shoulder
- 4.2 Pathology of cuff tears
- 4.3 Treatment of rotator cuff disease
- 4.4 Biceps
- 4.5 Frozen shoulder
- 4.6 Calcifying tendinitis
- 4.7 Instability
- 4.8 Surface replacement of the shoulder
- 4.9 Stemmed total shoulder replacement
- 4.10 Acromioclavicular joint
- 4.11 The clavicle and the sternoclavicular
- 4.12 Disorders of the scapula
- 4.13 Reverse geometry replacement
- SECTION 5
- 5.1 Clinical evaluation of elective problems in the adult elbow
- 5.2 Lateral and medial epicondylitis
- 5.3 Chronic instability of the elbow
- 5.4 Rheumatoid arthritis of the elbow
- 5.5 Osteoarthritis of the elbow joint
- 5.6 Arthroscopy
- 5.7 Bursitis of the elbow
- SECTION 6
- 6.1 Assessment and investigation of chronic wrist pain
- 6.2 Degenerative arthritis of the wrist
- 6.3 Kienbock's disease
- 6.4 The distal radioulnar joint
- 6.5 Rheumatoid arthritis of the hand and wrist
- 6.6 Osteoarthritis of the hand
- 6.7 Dupuytren's disease
- 6.8 Tendon disorders
- 6.9 Reconstruction after nerve injury
- 6.10 Peripheral nerve entrapment
- 6.11 Neurophysiological examination of the hand and wrist
- 6.12 Tumours and hand reconstruction
- 6.13 Ganglia of the wrist and hand
- 6.14 Hand infection
- SECTION 7
- 7.1 Indications for hip replacement
- 7.2 Approaches to the hip
- 7.3 Preoperative planning for total hip replacement, consent, and complications
- 7.4 Total hip replacement: implant fixation
- 7.5 Implant choice for primary total hip arthroplasty
- 7.6 Bearing surfaces
- 7.7 The young arthritic hip
- 7.8 The complex primary total hip replacement
- 7.9 Surgical options excluding total hip replacement for hip pain
- 7.10 Total hip replacement: modes of failure
- 7.11 Revision total hip replacement and complications in total hip replacement
- 7.12 Management of total hip replacement periprosthetic fractures
- 7.13 Management of the infected total hip replacement
- 7.14 Hip resurfacing
- 7.15 Sports injuries in the pelvic region
- 7.16 Inflammatory and metabolic bone disorders of the pelvis
- 7.17 Hip pain in the radiologically normal hip
- 7.18 Hip arthroscopy: assessment, investigation, and interventions
- SECTION 8
- 8.1 History and examination of the knee
- 8.2 Cartilage repair in the young knee
- 8.3 Magnetic resonance imaging of the knee
- 8.4 Osteotomies around the knee
- 8.5 Arthrodesis of the knee
- 8.6 Total knee replacement
- 8.7 Complications of total knee replacement
- 8.8 Revision total knee replacement
- 8.9 Miscellaneous conditions around the knee
- 8.10 The patellofemoral joint
- 8.11 Surgical techniques of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
- 8.12 Combined ligament injuries around the knee
- 8.13 Unicompartmental knee replacement
- 8.14 Meniscal injury and management
- SECTION 9
- 9.1 Ankle and hindfoot arthritis
- 9.2 Disorders of the forefoot
- 9.3 Diabetic foot
- 9.4 Orthoses of the foot and leg
- 9.5 Tendon and ligament disorders of the foot
- SECTION 10
- 10.1 Metabolic disease of skeleton and inherited disorders
- 10.2 Rheumatoid arthritis
- 10.3 Crystal arthropathies
- 10.4 Spondyloarthropathies
- 10.5 Inflammatory connective tissue disease
- 10.6 Osteoporosis
- 10.7 Osteoarthritis
- SECTION 11
- 11.1 Chronic long bone osteomyelitis
- 11.2 Miscellaneous orthopaedic infections
- 11.3 Amputations and prostheses
- 11.4 Acute osteomyelitis
- 11.5 Septic arthritis
- SECTION 12
- 12.1 Fracture classification
- 12.2 Complications of fractures
- 12.3 Orthopaedic approach to the multiply injured patient
- 12.4 Head, thoracic, and abdominal injury in the orthopaedic patient
- 12.5 Massive transfusion
- 12.6 Blast and ballistic injury
- 12.7 Management of open fractures
- 12.8 Soft tissue coverage
- 12.9 Combined vascular and orthopaedic injuries
- 12.10 Limb salvage versus amputation
- 12.11 Functional bracing
- 12.12 Principles of plate and screw osteosynthesis
- 12.13 Intramedullary nailing
- 12.14 Principles of monolateral external fixation
- 12.15 Principles of circular external fixation in trauma
- 12.16 Absorbable implants for fracture fixation
- 12.17 Stress fractures
- 12.18 Pathological fractures
- 12.19 Management of segmental bone defects
- 12.20 Injuries to muscle-tendon units
- 12.21 Dislocations and joint injuries in the hand
- 12.22 Flexor tendon injuries
- 12.23 Extensor tendon injuries in the hand and wrist
- 12.24 Soft tissue hand injuries
- 12.25 Nerve injuries
- 12.26 Brachial plexus injuries
- 12.27 Replantation
- 12.28 Metacarpal and phalangeal fractures
- 12.29 Scaphoid fractures
- 12.30 Instabilities of the carpus
- 12.31 Injuries to the distal radioulnar joint
- 12.32 Distal radius fracture
- 12.33 Forearm fractures
- 12.34 Elbow fractures and dislocations
- 12.35 Humeral shaft fractures
- 12.36 Fractures and dislocations of the shoulder girdle
- 12.37 Imaging in spinal trauma
- 12.38 Emergency management of the traumatized cervical spine
- 12.39 Upper cervical injuries
- 12.40 Subaxial cervical spine injuries
- 12.41 Whiplash-associated disorders
- 12.42 Thoracic fractures
- 12.43 Thoracolumbar, lumbar, and sacral fractures
- 12.44 Post-traumatic spinal reconstruction
- 12.45 Rehabilitation of spinal cord injuries
- 12.46 Pelvic ring fractures: assessment, associated injuries, and acute management
- 12.47 Pelvic fracture: definitive management
- 12.48 Fractures of the acetabulum: radiographic assessment and classification
- 12.49 Management of acetabular fractures
- 12.50 Dislocations of the hip and femoral head fractures
- 12.51 Femoral neck fractures
- 12.52 Trochanteric and subtrochanteric fractures
- 12.53 Femur shaft fractures
- 12.54 Supracondylar fractures of the femur
- 12.55 Patella fractures and dislocations
- 12.56 Tibial plateau fractures
- 12.57 Tibial shaft fractures
- 12.58 Tibial plafond fractures
- 12.59 Ankle fractures
- 12.60 Fractures of the talus and peritalar dislocations
- 12.61 Fractures of the calcaneum
- 12.62 Midfoot and forefoot fractures and dislocations
- SECTION 13
- 13.1 Osteomyelitis and septic arthritis in children
- 13.2a Juvenile idiopathic arthritis: medical aspects
- 13.2b Juvenile idiopathic arthritis: surgical management
- 13.3 An overview of cerebral palsy
- 13.4 Lower limb management in cerebral palsy
- 13.5 Upper limb management in cerebral palsy
- 13.6 Management of the child with total body involvement
- 13.7 The orthopaedic management of myelomeningocoele
- 13.8 Neurological aspects of spinal disorders in children
- 13.9 Arthrogryposis
- 13.10 Common disorders of the lower limb
- 13.11 Congenital upper limb anomalies
- 13.12 Congenital brachial plexus palsy
- 13.13 Malformations of the hand and wrist
- 13.14 Management of the limb deficient child
- 13.15 The management of limb length inequality
- 13.16 Developmental deformities of the lower limbs
- 13.17 Developmental dysplasia of the hip
- 13.18 Legg-Calve-Perthes disease
- 13.19 Slipped capital femoral epiphysis
- 13.20 Common knee conditions
- 13.21 Congenital talipes equinovarus
- 13.22 The foot in childhood
- 13.23 Sports injuries and syndromes
- SECTION 14
- 14.1 Musculoskeletal injuries in children
- 14.2 Physeal injuries
- 14.3 Fractures of the spine in children
- 14.4 Injuries around the shoulder in children
- 14.5 Fractures about the elbow in children
- 14.6 Fractures and dislocations about the paediatric forearm
- 14.7 Children's hand trauma
- 14.8 Injuries of the pelvis and hip in children
- 14.9 Injuries of the femur and patella in children
- 14.10 Tibial and ankle fractures in children
- 14.11 Foot injuries in children
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