Overview
- Editors:
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Robert A. Pedowitz
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Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, USA
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Christine B. Chung
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Department of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, USA
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Donald Resnick
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Department of Radiology, University of California, San Diego, USA
- This one-of-a-kind, interdisciplinary book is a practical resource on orthopedic MR imaging that bridges the backgrounds of radiologists and orthopedic surgeons
- Radiologists learn sports medicine terminology and why surgeons order imaging studies
- Orthopedists learn when to order an MRI, how MRI affects clinical decision making, and how to interpret imaging studies
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Table of contents (11 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xiii
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- Robert Downey Boutin, Sean T. Powell, Mark D. Bracker
Pages 1-44
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- Hamid Torshizy, Garry E. Gold, Christine B. Chung, Michael J. Angel, Nicholas A. Sgaglione, Steve Sharon
Pages 45-82
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- Sailaja Yadavalli, Donald Resnick, Catherine Robertson, Ryan Serrano, Robert A. Pedowitz
Pages 83-112
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- Mini N. Pathria, Douglas G. Chang, Choll W. Kim, Steven R. Garfin
Pages 113-156
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- Lynne S. Steinbach, Benjamin Shaffer, Patrick J. Murray
Pages 157-198
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- Romulo Baltazar, Benjamin May, Javier Beltran, Marc R. Safran
Pages 199-219
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- Weiling Chang, Donald Resnick, Matthew Meunier, Joshua N. Steinvurzel
Pages 221-240
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- Nicolas Theumann, Matthew Meunier
Pages 241-272
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- Cheryl A. Petersilge, Carlos A. Guanche
Pages 273-312
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- Theodore T. Miller, Robert A. Pedowitz, Ali Dalal, Catherine Robertson, Ryan Serrano
Pages 313-365
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- Jenny T. Bencardino, Zehava S. Rosenberg, Alastair S.E. Younger, Margie Pohl
Pages 367-425
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Back Matter
Pages 427-439
About this book
This book grew from the commonsense notion that orthopedic surgeons and sports medicine clinicians need to und- stand the practical application and interpretation of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the sake of their clinical pr- tices, while radiologists need broad clinical perspective in order to provide the best and most accurate MRI information upon which patient care decisions must be made. As obvious as that notion might be, relatively little emphasis was placed upon genuine, interdisciplinary MRI education for practicing doctors, especially at the early advent of MRI technology. This need is now much better recognized, evidenced by the growth of excellent lecture-based educational opportunities. Examples include interdisciplinary instructional courses taught by both radiologists and orthopedic surgeons at the Radiological Society of North America and the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons over the last half decade. What has been missing from the educational landscape has been a focused, practical reference that would integrate the basic needs of radiologists and clinicians alike. This was the impetus for the current book, which has been an extra- dinary cooperative venture by authors who were asked to bridge that gap in a single resource: orthopedic surgeons and sports medicine specialists writing for the sake of their radiology colleagues, and radiologists writing for the benefit of their clinician partners.
Reviews
From the reviews:
"This book does a remarkable job of bringing together orthopedic sports and MRI radiologic imaging experts to create a practical reference to assist sports medicine clinicians in interpreting common MR images related to sports injuries. … The book targets sports medicine clinicians … who make decisions based on MR images. … This is a must-read for orthopedic residents, radiology residents, sports medicine clinicians, and MRI radiologists who treat them." (Mark R. Hutchinson, Doody’s Review Services, January, 2009)