News

Say goodbye to the Kappa Delta era and hello to OREA—the Orthopaedic Research Excellence Awards. The American Academy of ...
If your idea of excitement involves synovial fluid, bacteria, and heat curves—today is your lucky day.
In the old days, an incidental durotomy during lumbar spine surgery meant an automatic overnight stay—and maybe a few extra gray hairs for the surgeon. But new evidence suggests it’s time to break ...
The bone-patellar tendon-bone (BPTB) graft has long reigned supreme as the gold standard in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. It’s reliable, it’s familiar, and it gets the job done. But there ...
“Own the Bone” has already been adopted by over 300 healthcare institutions nationwide, but Mount Sinai is putting its own spin on it. The goal? To identify, evaluate, and treat patients who’ve ...
In a move that could reshape the orthopedic robotics landscape (and possibly freak out a few surgical residents), Zimmer ...
For the middle-aged weekend warrior who tears their hamstring sprinting after a pickleball, the next big decision isn’t just which brace to wear—it’s whether to go under the knife. A new meta-analysis ...
We orthopedic surgeons love a good fix. Broken bones? Repaired. Torn tendons? Reconstructed. Missing limbs? Well, now we’re talking real challenges—the kind that require not just implants and ...
Highridge is stacking its motion preservation portfolio like a surgeon lining up titanium cages. Latest addition is ...
Primary stems in revision cases are tempting. They’re cheaper. They’re familiar. They go in faster. But as this study makes ...
Ever have a unicorn come limping into your trauma bay? In pediatric ortho, that’s what Dubberley IIA elbow fracture is.
Just when you thought vertebral body tethering (VBT) was gaining solid ground here comes the twist—literally. A new study out ...