Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Navigation and MIS in Orthopedic Surgery
James B. Stiehl ; Werner H. Konermann ; Rolf G. Haaker ; Anthony M. DiGioia (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Surgical Orthopedics; Orthopedics; Surgery
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2007 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-36690-4
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-36691-1
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2007
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer Medizin Verlag Heidelberg 2007
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
CT-Based Navigation Systems
B. Jaramaz; A. M. DiGioia
Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.
Part I - Computer Assited Orthopaedic Surgery | Pp. 9-14
Principles of MIS in Total Knee Arthroplasty
F. Benazzo; S. Stroppa; S. Cazzamali; L. Piovani; M. Mosconi
Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.
Part II B - Minimally Invasive Surgery: Total Knee Arthroplasty | Pp. 190-193
Fluoroscopy-Based Navigation in Genesis II Total Knee Arthroplasty with the Medtronic “Viking” System
F.- W. Hagena; M. Kettrukat; R. M. Christ; M. Hackbart
Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.
Part II C - Minimally Invasive Surgery and Navigation: Total Knee Arthroplasty | Pp. 255-260
Image-Free Navigation in ACL Replacement with the OrthoPilot System
H.- J. Eichhorn
Load balancing emerges as an important problem that affects the performance of structured peer-to-peer systems. This paper presents a peer-to-peer system relying on the partitionning of a de Bruijn graph. The proposed system integrates mechanisms that perform index and storage load balancing. Index load refers to the network traffic incurred by a peer in managing an object index, while storage load refers to the storage space and network traffic required to store objects. The proposed mechanisms allow to effectively distribute both index load and storage load according to the peers’ capacities.
Part III - Anterior-Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction | Pp. 306-314
Total Hip Arthroplasty with the Minimally-Invasive Two-Incisions Approach
R. Berger
Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.
Part IV B - Minimally Invasive Surgery: Total Hip Arthroplasty | Pp. 386-392
Measuring Cup alignment from Radiographs after THR
B. Jaramaz; K. Eckman
Minimally invasive surgery has the potential to minimize surgical trauma and pain while improving functional recovery in patients having total hip replacement. The minimally invasive two-incision total hip technique described here, where muscle and tendon trauma is minimized, shows substantial short-term pain and functional improvement over traditional hip replacement. While this minimally invasive two-incision technique shows great promise; this technique requires meticulous surgical technique, specialized instrumentation, and special instruction. Therefore, specialized training is strongly recommended for surgeons interested in this new technique to minimize complications and ensure success.
Part VII - Future Perspectives in CAOS | Pp. 586-591