16
Part III Amy L. McIntosh, MD Pediatric Orthopedic Surgeon Mayo Clinic Rochester, Minnesota

Part III Amy L. McIntosh, MD Pediatric Orthopedic Surgeon Mayo Clinic Rochester, Minnesota

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Part III

Amy L. McIntosh, MDPediatric Orthopedic Surgeon

Mayo ClinicRochester, Minnesota

Medical Therapy

• Supplements

• Over-the-counter medicines

• Prescription medicines

• Injection therapy

Supplements

• Little scientific evidence for/against products– Not subject to FDA regulations

– Reasonable evidence for glucosamine / chondroitin helping with arthritic symptoms

– No evidence for other compounds

OTC Medicines

• Tylenol

• NSAIDs – Ibuprofen (Advil) and Naprosyn (Aleve)– Equally effective in all major

studies– Quite safe when taken with

supervision• Stomach ulcers

• Kidney trouble

Prescription Medicines

• Prescription NSAIDs– Celebrex, Mobic, etc– No better than ibuprofen

or naprosyn in comparable doses

• Benefits for select patients• Primary benefit is

convenience

– Cardiovascular risks unknown

Prescription Medicines - Opiates

• Synthetic derivatives of morphine– Effective– But… tolerance building and habit

forming– Frequent depression and side

effects

– Used very selectively and carefully under specialty supervision

Physical Therapy

• Important aspect of joint care in SS

• Particularly important before and after any surgery

Injection Therapy

• Injection of cortisone or hyaluronic acid derivatives

• Effective in ~2/3rds patients

• Effect often fades

• Safe for up to 3-4 times/year

Surgical Treatment

• Fusion

• Arthroscopy

• Realignment / reshaping

• Joint replacement

Fusion

• Traditional treatment for arthritis in the young– “No motion, no pain”

• Not for patients with multiple joint involvement– Spine, ankle, wrist

possible exceptions

Arthroscopy

Arthroscopy

• Low morbidity outpatient procedure• Doesn’t “burn” bridges

– Effective against well defined targets• Focally torn cartilage

– Not effective for generalized joint pain or arthritis

Realignment Procedures - Knee

• Surgically change alignment to “offload” worn area

• Delay need for joint replacement

Realignment Procedures - Hip

Impinging bump on the edge ofa malformed femoral head (ball)