Recovery After OATS for Ankle Cartilage RepairOATS (osteochondral autograft transfer) replaces damaged ankle cartilage and bone with a healthy graft from the knee, producing hyaline-like tissue rather than scar tissue; at ten years, graft survival reached 94.9% and functional scores improved from 51.9 to 75.3, though donor-site morbidity affected 6.7–10.8%.OATS (osteochondral autograft transfer) replaces damaged ankle cartilage and bone with a healthy graft from the knee, producing hyaline-like tissue rather than scar tissue; at ten years, graft survival reached 94.9% and functional scores improved from 51.9 to 75.3, though donor-site morbidity affected 6.7–10.8%.
Which specialist to see for plantar fasciitisMost plantar fasciitis cases arise from movement imbalances, not structural foot problems. Physiotherapy is the fastest first-line treatment; specialist input is needed only if conservative management does not work.Most plantar fasciitis cases arise from movement imbalances, not structural foot problems. Physiotherapy is the fastest first-line treatment; specialist input is needed only if conservative management does not work.
What to assess before your rotator cuff appointmentRoughly a quarter of adults over 50 have a rotator cuff tear, yet two-thirds cause no pain and only one in fifteen ever seek treatment.Roughly a quarter of adults over 50 have a rotator cuff tear, yet two-thirds cause no pain and only one in fifteen ever seek treatment.
When Achilles tendinopathy needs a specialistAchilles tendinopathy has two anatomically distinct subtypes — noninsertional and insertional — which respond differently to treatment: noninsertional cases typically improve with physiotherapy loading programmes, while insertional disease at the bone-tendon junction often resists standard rehabilitation and requires specialist input sooner.Achilles tendinopathy has two anatomically distinct subtypes — noninsertional and insertional — which respond differently to treatment: noninsertional cases typically improve with physiotherapy loading programmes, while insertional disease at the bone-tendon junction often resists standard rehabilitation and requires specialist input sooner.
When knee replacement pain needs specialist reviewOnce bacteria establish themselves on a knee implant, antibiotics cannot penetrate the protective layer they form, making surgery almost always necessary — catching infection early prevents this escalation.Once bacteria establish themselves on a knee implant, antibiotics cannot penetrate the protective layer they form, making surgery almost always necessary — catching infection early prevents this escalation.
Who to see first for tennis elbowTennis elbow develops when a forearm tendon accumulates microscopic tears faster than it can self-repair; progressive loading through physiotherapy rebuilds the damaged structure, whereas anti-inflammatory treatments only mask pain.Tennis elbow develops when a forearm tendon accumulates microscopic tears faster than it can self-repair; progressive loading through physiotherapy rebuilds the damaged structure, whereas anti-inflammatory treatments only mask pain.
Gluteal tendinopathy beyond self-managementGluteal tendinopathy — a condition in which hip tendons lose capacity to handle everyday load — self-perpetuates through geometry: compressive positions reload the sensitised structure, whilst rest removes stimulus and generic stretches worsen compression.Gluteal tendinopathy — a condition in which hip tendons lose capacity to handle everyday load — self-perpetuates through geometry: compressive positions reload the sensitised structure, whilst rest removes stimulus and generic stretches worsen compression.
TFL Strain and Choosing the Right SpecialistTFL strain ranges from acute tears to chronic overuse; clinical markers—weight-bearing ability, bruising extent, and palpable gap—grade the injury, and the grade determines whether physiotherapy or physician assessment is required first.TFL strain ranges from acute tears to chronic overuse; clinical markers—weight-bearing ability, bruising extent, and palpable gap—grade the injury, and the grade determines whether physiotherapy or physician assessment is required first.
When intercostal muscle strain needs a specialistIntercostal muscle strain — overstretching or tearing of muscles between ribs — sits at the junction of chest-wall and spinal anatomy since each rib attaches to a thoracic vertebra. Most respond to rest and physiotherapy, though specialist assessment is needed for complete tears, high-impact injuries, or inadequate recovery.Intercostal muscle strain — overstretching or tearing of muscles between ribs — sits at the junction of chest-wall and spinal anatomy since each rib attaches to a thoracic vertebra. Most respond to rest and physiotherapy, though specialist assessment is needed for complete tears, high-impact injuries, or inadequate recovery.
Which specialist to see for supraspinatus tendinopathyTendinitis, impingement syndrome, and bursitis are overlapping labels for a single supraspinatus tendon problem. A physiotherapist is the primary treating clinician for most cases; surgical referral is escalation, not routine.Tendinitis, impingement syndrome, and bursitis are overlapping labels for a single supraspinatus tendon problem. A physiotherapist is the primary treating clinician for most cases; surgical referral is escalation, not routine.
Choosing treatment after an ACL tearACL tears often cause swelling, instability and a sense that the knee will give way, especially during turning and cutting sports. Treatment hinges on instability, sport demands and associated injuries: structured rehabilitation can work well for some, while reconstruction is favoured when repeated giving-way episodes threaten function or meniscal damage.ACL tears often cause swelling, instability and a sense that the knee will give way, especially during turning and cutting sports. Treatment hinges on instability, sport demands and associated injuries: structured rehabilitation can work well for some, while reconstruction is favoured when repeated giving-way episodes threaten function or meniscal damage.
When joint and muscle injuries need a specialistPersistent swelling, locking, giving way, deformity, inability to bear weight or chest pain with pressure-like tightness are the main signs that injuries need urgent assessment rather than more self-care; ankle sprains, hamstring pulls, shoulder pain and hip pain that stall after a few weeks also justify GP, physio or specialist…Persistent swelling, locking, giving way, deformity, inability to bear weight or chest pain with pressure-like tightness are the main signs that injuries need urgent assessment rather than more self-care; ankle sprains, hamstring pulls, shoulder pain and hip pain that stall after a few weeks also justify GP, physio or specialist review.