Arthroscopic Surgery

Arthroscopic surgery, also known as arthroscopy, is the process where a joint is operated on using an arthroscope, a small fibre optic camera. The advantage over traditional surgery is that only small incisions need to be made, and the joint does not have to be opened up fully. This reduces the recovery time of the patient and may increase the rate of surgical success due to less trauma to the tissues. It is especially useful for professional athletes, who frequently injure knee joints but for whom time out of action is loss of money for both themselves and their organization, but is becoming the most important surgical method for knee and shoulder injuries in other patients, too. The instruments used are also smaller. Surgeons watch what they are doing on a video monitor, and can diagnose and repair broken joint tissue (e.g. ligaments, menisci.).

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
genre fiction
macintosh iici
reflexive space
sanzo nosaka
portrait
hunter gatherer
willem mengelberg
list of birds of santa cruz county, california
edmund gettier
thomas nickerson
64
list of historical elephants
list of birds of santa cruz county, california (continued)
schipperke
william prynne
alfred thayer mahan
claire coombs
der spiegel
peter ii of yugoslavia
tortoise (band)
lock, stock and two smoking barrels
the core
aston university
william f. albright
notre dame de reims
alphaeus philemon cole
a plea for captain john brown
skoda 75 mm model 1928
kandula
cathedral of saint martin, utrecht
skoda 75 mm model 1936
development economics
samuel rickard christophers
brennus
open mapping theorem
philo
philo's works
philo's view of god
good news translation
edward kelly
babar the elephant
nelvana
patricia neal
the l shaped room