OATS versus mosaicplasty for knee cartilage repairOATS and mosaicplasty are the same surgical technique applied at different scales: OATS transfers a single cartilage plug for knee defects under 2 cm², mosaicplasty tiles smaller grafts across 2–4 cm² lesions.OATS and mosaicplasty are the same surgical technique applied at different scales: OATS transfers a single cartilage plug for knee defects under 2 cm², mosaicplasty tiles smaller grafts across 2–4 cm² lesions.
When intercostal muscle strain needs specialist assessmentIntercostal strains take weeks or months to heal because these muscles contract with every breath, making persistent pain at three to four weeks normal rather than a sign of complication.Intercostal strains take weeks or months to heal because these muscles contract with every breath, making persistent pain at three to four weeks normal rather than a sign of complication.
OCA or MACI for large knee cartilage defectsWhen subchondral bone is damaged alongside large knee cartilage defects, OCA — a single-stage transplant of donor bone and cartilage — is the preferred choice; MACI, which implants cultured cells, cannot restore bone stock once lost.When subchondral bone is damaged alongside large knee cartilage defects, OCA — a single-stage transplant of donor bone and cartilage — is the preferred choice; MACI, which implants cultured cells, cannot restore bone stock once lost.
Who treats rotator cuff tears on the NHSRotator cuff surgery is done by a trauma and orthopaedic surgeon, but most NHS patients see a physiotherapist first, as the system routes by age and tear type: traumatic under-70 cases go to surgeons, degenerative over-70 cases start with physiotherapy.Rotator cuff surgery is done by a trauma and orthopaedic surgeon, but most NHS patients see a physiotherapist first, as the system routes by age and tear type: traumatic under-70 cases go to surgeons, degenerative over-70 cases start with physiotherapy.
Osteochondral Allograft for Post-Traumatic Knee DefectsWhen post-traumatic knee injury damages both cartilage and underlying bone, osteochondral allograft transplants provide a single-stage solution that other repair methods cannot match. Roughly 75–82% of patients return to sport; grafts show 87% survival at five years, declining to 68% at twenty.When post-traumatic knee injury damages both cartilage and underlying bone, osteochondral allograft transplants provide a single-stage solution that other repair methods cannot match. Roughly 75–82% of patients return to sport; grafts show 87% survival at five years, declining to 68% at twenty.
Which specialist to see first for sudden wrist painThe right specialist for wrist pain depends on symptom type: inflammatory symptoms point to rheumatology, mechanical symptoms to orthopaedic surgery, overuse symptoms to physiotherapy.The right specialist for wrist pain depends on symptom type: inflammatory symptoms point to rheumatology, mechanical symptoms to orthopaedic surgery, overuse symptoms to physiotherapy.
MACI versus microfracture for knee cartilage repairMACI outperforms microfracture for knee cartilage defects of 3 cm² or larger, according to the SUMMIT randomised trial, which found significantly greater improvements in pain and function at two years that persisted through five years.MACI outperforms microfracture for knee cartilage defects of 3 cm² or larger, according to the SUMMIT randomised trial, which found significantly greater improvements in pain and function at two years that persisted through five years.
Which specialist treats sciatica and when to escalateMost sciatica improves within 4–6 weeks at home, but the condition is frequently misattributed to nerve compression when other causes are responsible. The right specialist at the right care stage—not the 'best' specialist—determines whether treatment accelerates recovery or stalls it.Most sciatica improves within 4–6 weeks at home, but the condition is frequently misattributed to nerve compression when other causes are responsible. The right specialist at the right care stage—not the 'best' specialist—determines whether treatment accelerates recovery or stalls it.
Which specialist to see for a meniscus tearFor degenerative meniscus tears, recent evidence shows surgery offers no advantage over physiotherapy; for traumatic tears without mechanical instability, six months of conservative management must precede any orthopaedic referral. Urgent specialist assessment is reserved for locked knees, acute injuries in younger patients within three to eight weeks of injury, and…For degenerative meniscus tears, recent evidence shows surgery offers no advantage over physiotherapy; for traumatic tears without mechanical instability, six months of conservative management must precede any orthopaedic referral. Urgent specialist assessment is reserved for locked knees, acute injuries in younger patients within three to eight weeks of injury, and persistent mechanical symptoms.
AMIC vs microfracture for knee cartilage repairBoth AMIC and microfracture improve pain and function in the first two years; beyond that point, microfracture outcomes progressively deteriorate whilst AMIC maintains stable gains through a decade of follow-up.Both AMIC and microfracture improve pain and function in the first two years; beyond that point, microfracture outcomes progressively deteriorate whilst AMIC maintains stable gains through a decade of follow-up.
ACI knee cartilage repair in the UKACI harvests a patient's own cartilage cells, cultures them to roughly 20 times their original number, then implants them in a second operation; NHS funding applies only to patients with defects over 2 cm², no prior cartilage repair, minimal arthritis, and access to a specialist centre.ACI harvests a patient's own cartilage cells, cultures them to roughly 20 times their original number, then implants them in a second operation; NHS funding applies only to patients with defects over 2 cm², no prior cartilage repair, minimal arthritis, and access to a specialist centre.
Choosing a specialist for supraspinatus tendinopathyMost UK patients with supraspinatus tendinopathy can self-refer directly to a specialist MSK physiotherapist without a GP appointment; the first appointment is a clinical assessment identifying factors maintaining tendon irritation rather than simply an exercise handout.Most UK patients with supraspinatus tendinopathy can self-refer directly to a specialist MSK physiotherapist without a GP appointment; the first appointment is a clinical assessment identifying factors maintaining tendon irritation rather than simply an exercise handout.