Publications by authors named "Anna E Crawford"

Background: Posterior glenoid labral injuries are more common in football players than in the general population. Arthroscopic repair with all-suture anchors has proven to be an effective technique to address other abnormalities, allowing for low-profile constructs that minimize damage to surrounding tissue. Few studies have examined the outcomes of posterior labral repair with all-suture anchors in football players.

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Purpose: To evaluate the effect of tourniquet use during ACL reconstruction on quadriceps strength, intraoperative and postoperative blood loss, operative time, thigh girth or calf girth, and postoperative pain.

Methods: A systematic review using PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews was conducted following the PRISMA guidelines. Randomized controlled trials and nonrandomized studies that evaluated intraoperative and postoperative effects of tourniquet usage during arthroscopic ACL reconstruction published between November 1996 and January 2023 were included.

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Background: The increasing prevalence of ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) injuries, particularly in young athletes, necessitates optimization of treatment options. The introduction of UCL repair with internal bracing offers an exciting alternative to traditional UCL reconstruction.

Purpose: To compare midterm outcomes between UCL repair with internal bracing and UCL reconstruction in competitive athletes.

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Background: Benign bone lesions are a common incidental finding in athletes during workup for musculoskeletal complaints, and athletes are frequently advised to halt participation in contact sports. There are no current guidelines to assist clinicians in referring patients with these lesions to a subspecialist or in advising athletes on the safety of returning to sport.

Purpose: To assist sports medicine physicians in appropriate referral for patients with benign bone lesions through presentation of a literature review and the case of an adolescent athlete with a benign bone lesion in a location with a significant fracture risk.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to identify helmet use, head injury risks, and factors affecting these among collegiate equestrians at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Equestrian Sports Medicine Collaborative.
  • - Over 50% of participants experienced falls in a year, with concussions being the most reported head injury type; many athletes did not seek medical treatment even after self-reporting concussions.
  • - Findings revealed that experienced riders had a lower incidence of head injuries, but a majority (78%) did not follow guidelines to replace helmets after a fall, indicating a potential gap in safety practices.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates the outcomes of surgical reconstruction for multiligament knee injuries (MLKIs) in competitive athletes over a 20-year period, highlighting a significant lack of existing data on this topic in orthopedic literature.
  • - Out of 151 patients studied, 119 provided outcome data, revealing that 81% of athletes who attempted to return to sports post-surgery were successful, and 94% expressed satisfaction with their surgical results.
  • - Factors such as older age and female sex were linked to lower functional scores, and 24% of patients required additional knee surgeries after their initial MLKI reconstruction.
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Context: Equestrian sports continue to gain popularity in the United States and are associated with a high injury rate, especially involving the central nervous system and thorax. Due to this high rate of injury and the potential for long-term consequences associated with participation, an understanding of the unique risks of this sport is needed.

Objective: To describe severe injury in equestrian sports and review the role that protective gear plays in injury mitigation.

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Background: Long-term outcomes for isolated anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstructions in competitive American football athletes are well reported in the literature, but little data currently exist regarding multiligament knee injury (MLKI) reconstruction outcomes.

Purpose: To examine patient-reported and return-to-sport outcomes of competitive American football athletes who underwent primary, single-staged, multiligament knee reconstruction.

Study Design: Case series; Level of evidence, 4.

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Introduction: Plasma levels of syndecan-1 (Sdc-1), a biomarker of endothelial glycocalyx (EG) damage, correlate with worse outcomes in trauma patients. However, EG injury is not well characterized in injured older adults (OA). The aims of this study were to characterize Sdc-1 shedding in OA trauma patients relative to younger adults (YA) and determine associations with putative regulators of EG sheddases.

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Objectives: To determine potential factors influencing female medical students' interest and subsequent application to orthopedics, and to evaluate female and male medical students' perceptions of women in the field of orthopedics.

Methods: An institutional review board-approved survey was distributed in March 2020 and subsequently in April 2022 to medical students in the classes of 2023 and 2024 at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Heersink School of Medicine. Study data were collected and managed using REDCap electronic data capture.

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Based on limited serological studies, at least 10% of the US population has been exposed to spotted fever group (SFGR) species. The immunofluorescence antibody assay (IFA) has been the gold standard for the serodiagnosis of rickettsial infections such as spotted fever rickettsiosis (SFR). However, the IFA is semi-quantitative and subjective, requiring a high level of expertise to interpret it correctly.

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Guinea pigs are an ideal animal model for the study of several infectious diseases, including tuberculosis, legionellosis, brucellosis, and spotted fever rickettsiosis. In comparison to the murine model, clinical signs in guinea pigs are more representative of disease in humans, the guinea pig immune system is more similar to that of the human, and their large size offers logistic advantages for sample collection while following disease progression. Unfortunately, the advantage of using guinea pigs in biomedical research, particularly in understanding the immune response to infectious agents, is limited in large part by the paucity of available reagents and lack of genetically manipulated strains.

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