When taking a step back is a veritable leap forward. Reversing decades of arthroscopy for managing joint pain: five reasons that could explain declining rates of common arthroscopic surgeries
Autor: | Simo Taimela, Clare L Ardern, Ville M. Mattila, Teemu Paatela, Teppo L. N. Järvinen |
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Přispěvatelé: | Tampere University, Department of Musculoskeletal Diseases, Clinical Medicine |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
musculoskeletal diseases
medicine.medical_specialty Painful joints Elbow Physical Therapy Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation Osteoarthritis Wrist 03 medical and health sciences Arthroscopy 0302 clinical medicine medicine Humans Pain Management Orthopedics and Sports Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry General surgery 030229 sport sciences General Medicine 3126 Surgery anesthesiology intensive care radiology medicine.disease Arthralgia 3. Good health medicine.anatomical_structure Joint pain Orthopedic surgery medicine.symptom Ankle Joint Diseases business Medical Futility |
Zdroj: | British journal of sports medicine. 54(22) |
ISSN: | 1473-0480 |
Popis: | Arthroscopy heralded an age of surgery-as-frontline-treatment for the painful joints of middle-aged and older people. By the end of the 20th century, knee, shoulder, hip and ankle arthroscopies were some of the most frequently performed surgeries in developed countries.1 Questions were first raised about the efficacy of knee arthroscopy for advanced osteoarthritis in 2002, when Professor Moseley and colleagues published their landmark placebo-controlled trial.2 Similarly, rigorous trials followed, each questioning the efficacy of arthroscopic partial meniscectomy and subacromial decompression—the two most common arthroscopic surgeries. Despite compelling, high-quality evidence, why did the number of arthroscopies for degenerative conditions continue to rise in the first decade of the 21st century?1 The most obvious change to clinical practice was that arthroscopies were increasingly billed using different procedure (billing) codes.3 Our Finnish colleagues investigated the trends in various arthroscopic surgeries in Finland between 1997 and 2016 and found that the incidence of knee and shoulder arthroscopy peaked in 2006 and 2007, respectively, then steadily declined.1 The rates of wrist, elbow and hip arthroscopies also declined after their 2014 peak.1 Although the rates have declined in some countries, arthroscopies for patients with degenerative joint diseases remain some of the most commonly performed surgeries around the world. The Finnish Centre for Evidence-Based Orthopaedics (FICEBO, www.ficebo.com) has been studying arthroscopic surgery for … |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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