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It has by now been established that carpal ligamentary lesions may
lead to instability and ultimately to carpal arthritis. However,
the variety of anatomopathological classifications and the
multiplicity of surgical repair techniques reflect the difficulty
of grasping this ligamentary pathology. Clinical analysis and
traditional investigation techniques must successfully address the
complexity of the wrist, which is largely due to the number of
synchronized bones involved in every movement of the hand. The
clinical analysis of the wrist is insufficient to precisely measure
the mobility of each carpal bone, making paraclinical examinations
also significant for clinical diagnosis. The tools available today
range from X-rays to arthroscopy, including arthroCTscans and soon
MRI. As for repair techniques, their diversity must not hide the
fact that a biomechanical and physiological principle is involved
and must be identified. This book presents the findings of an
expert group in the field of wrist pathology. It seeks to analyze,
understand, explain and make comprehensible, if not obvious, the
reflections that each practitioner should employ during the
diagnosis and treatment of carpal ligamentary lesions. The focus is
consciously not on degenerative carpal pathology, which usually
enjoys more visibility. We hope that readers will benefit from the
fact that fragmented pieces of knowledge are gathered in a single
work, that they will find in this initial synthesis an inspiration
to rethink a difficult and sometimes thankless surgery and to
further the surgical advances of the 21st century.
It has by now been established that carpal ligamentary lesions may
lead to instability and ultimately to carpal arthritis. However,
the variety of anatomopathological classifications and the
multiplicity of surgical repair techniques reflect the difficulty
of grasping this ligamentary pathology. Clinical analysis and
traditional investigation techniques must successfully address the
complexity of the wrist, which is largely due to the number of
synchronized bones involved in every movement of the hand. The
clinical analysis of the wrist is insufficient to precisely measure
the mobility of each carpal bone, making paraclinical examinations
also significant for clinical diagnosis. The tools available today
range from X-rays to arthroscopy, including arthroCTscans and soon
MRI. As for repair techniques, their diversity must not hide the
fact that a biomechanical and physiological principle is involved
and must be identified. This book presents the findings of an
expert group in the field of wrist pathology. It seeks to analyze,
understand, explain and make comprehensible, if not obvious, the
reflections that each practitioner should employ during the
diagnosis and treatment of carpal ligamentary lesions. The focus is
consciously not on degenerative carpal pathology, which usually
enjoys more visibility. We hope that readers will benefit from the
fact that fragmented pieces of knowledge are gathered in a single
work, that they will find in this initial synthesis an inspiration
to rethink a difficult and sometimes thankless surgery and to
further the surgical advances of the 21st century.
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