Fields of treatment / Orthopedy, sports arthroscopy, traumatology

Orthopedy, sports arthroscopy, traumatology

  • Anesthesiology and intensive care focus on monitoring and maintaining patients' vital signs during operations.

  • With the arthroscope, we gradually examine the entire joint space and thereby obtain information about its damage. Special tools can be introduced into the joint through other inputs.

  • Arthroscopy is currently the method of choice in the diagnosis and treatment of injuries to the intra-articular structures of the knee joint. It is performed using a minimally invasive approach.

  • Pain, limited movement, swelling and signs of joint instability are problems caused by an traumatic or non-traumatic mechanism that brought you to the doctor.

  • Arthrosis belongs to the so-called degenerative joint disease, which leads to reduced mobility of the joint and its subsequent damage. It is accompanied by great pain, stiffness and swelling of the joint.

  • A Baker's cyst is a lump filled with synovial fluid that occurs in the knee area.It often occurs in patients after injuries, gout, arthrosis or rheumatoid arthritis.

  • Bursae, or so-called weight pouches, are closed fibrous pockets filled with fluid that are located near a number of joints. Their main purpose is to reduce friction and help free movement.

  • Carpal tunnel syndrome is the most common so-called strait syndrome of the peripheral nerve on the upper limb, when there is pressure on the central nerve in the place of the carpal tunnel.

  • De Quervain's disease is a common cause of hand and wrist pain.Destruction and inflammation of the tendons and their sheaths in the area of ​​the thumb makes pain-free movement impossible when moving the thumb in the space of the fibrous loop.

  • The introduction of arthroscopy brought a significant improvement in the results of treatment and shortened the healing time of damaged joints.

  • An exostosis is a superficial bone growth from bone or cartilage tissue.It occurs in childhood (genetically determined) or arises as a result of an injury. It is a benign formation.

  • Stenosing tendovaginitis of the tendons of the hand or - flaking finger. Painful popping or skipping in the area of ​​the finger when bending it, or vice versa when stretching it.

  • Spear's elbow, sometimes also called golfer's elbow, is a painful disease of the muscle attachments on the inside of the elbow joint, i.e. on the little side of the elbow.

  • An arthroscopic procedure used to correct anterior instability of the shoulder joint, most often post-traumatic. It is an improvement of the classic operating method

  • Rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament is the most common type of traumatic injury to the soft structures of the knee. It is often accompanied by an injury to the meniscus and the internal collateral ligament.

  • Tennis elbow is a typical painful disease of the muscle attachments at the upper end of the forearm, in the area of ​​the outer side of the elbow joint. It typically appears in active athletes.

  • From a functional, anatomical point of view, the skeleton of the wrist is a complex apparatus that enables free mobility of the entire hand. The skeletal base consists of the distal part of the forearm bones and eight carpal bones.

  • An arthroscopic examination should clarify the origin of your problems, determine the extent of damage to the joint and thus enable its treatment according to the available treatment methods.

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