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th Biennial ISAKOS Congress

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O C ENDOBUTTON™ *smith&nephew Family of Fixation Devices

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Endoscopy T 978 749 1000 ™ Trademark of Smith & Nephew. Reg US Patent and Trademark Office. Smith & Nephew, Inc. ©2006 Smith & Nephew. All rights reserved Andover, MA 01810 USA www.smith-nephew.com Printed in the USA 08/06 1997 Rev. A ISAKOS. We Italyin2007. lookforwardtoseeingyouinFlorence, premier eventandbecomeapartoftheinternationalexperiencethatis You areavitalpartofISAKOSandweencourageyoutoexperiencethis welcome reception. on Flor therapy andrehabilitation.Inaddition,youwillfindinformation practical spor Advances inKneeAr presentations, availableawardopportunities,TheMastersPre-Course: W promising basicscience. but whichalsoallowsampletimefornewsurgicaldevelopmentsand You willfindaprogramwhichemphasizesevidencedbasedmedicine, Chair from theISAKOSPresidentandProgram welcome 05–2007ISAKOSPresident – 2005 John A.Ber ithin thispr ence, hotelr gfeld, MD ts medicineandaspecialeditionmeetingonphysical eliminary programyouwillalsofinddetailsaboutpaper eser thr high qualityoftheISAKOSCongr disciplinary facultywillbepresent,addingtothe research andclinicalpapers.Adiversemulti- workshop sessions,symposiaandscientific courses, livesurgicaldemonstrations,lunchtime extensive scientificprogramincludinginstructional The ISAKOSProgramCommitteehascreatedan personnel, residentsandfellows. orthopaedic surgeons,aswellalliedhealth Congress willdrawover2,000international all overtheworld.We anticipate theISAKOS with leadersandfriendsinorthopaedicsfrom exchange scientificinformationandnetwork international forumwhereyouareableto hallmark ofoursocietyandprovidesan in Florence,Italy. TheISAKOSCongressisthe 2007 ISAKOS CongresstobeheldonMay27–31, W oplasty 6 vations, tours,thespousepr e inviteyoutoparticipateinthe6thBiennial TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS , ateamphysiciancourseemphasizing 2007 ISAKOSProgramChair Lars Engebr etsen, MD,PhD ogram and ess program. • MAY 27–31, 2007 • Day Tours.Day . . Lectures. Course Instructional . Congress Awards . Papers Scientific . PreliminaryProgram . Glance. Program At A . . Pre-Course . SurgicalDemonstrations Live Program. . Spouse . WelcomeReception . Congress The About . Facts Quick . Italy. Florence,About A Table ofContents Congress Sponsors. . Sponsors. Congress ISAK R . Information Hotel . Information Registration . . Symposium. Rehabilitation Orthopaedic SportsMedicine T www.isakos.com E-mail: Fax: S 2678 Ar International Societyof otIAO . . ISAKOS bout egistration F elephone: FLORENCE, ITALY an Ramon,CA thr OS +1 B oscopy ishop D Leadership isakos ( 925) 807–1199 welcome +1 (925)80 r . orm , KneeSurgeryand @ riv isakos.com 94583 e, S . uite 7 USA 250 – 1 197 | 1 41 39 37 36 35 34 33 29 28 17 10 11 9 8 7 7 5 4 3 2 about ISAKOS ISAKOS was formed… by the merger of the International Arthroscopy Association (IAA) and the International Society of the Knee (ISK) at the IAA & ISK Combined Congress in 1995.

ISAKOS is now… an international society of surgeons established to advance the worldwide exchange and dissemination of education, research and patient care in arthroscopy, knee surgery and orthopaedic sports medicine.

ISAKOS has partnerships with… • The American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM) • The Arthroscopy Association of North America (AANA) • The Asia Pacific Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (APOSSM) • The European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy (ESSKA) • The Sociedad Latino Americana de Ortopedia y Traumatologia (SLARD)

ISAKOS has 1,900 members from 72 different countries: Argentina France Lebanon Romania Australia Georgia Libya Russia Austria Germany Liechtenstein Saudi Arabia Belgium Greece Lithuania Singapore Bolivia Guatemala Luxembourg Slovakia Brazil Honduras Malaysia Slovenia Canada Hong Kong Mexico South Africa Chile Hungary Netherlands Spain China India New Zealand Sweden Colombia Indonesia Nicaragua Switzerland Croatia Iran Norway Taiwan Czech Republic Ireland Oman Thailand Denmark Israel Pakistan Tunisia Dominican Republic Italy Peru Turkey Ecuador Japan Philippines United Kingdom Egypt Kenya Poland Uruguay Estonia Korea Portugal USA Finland Latvia Puerto Rico Venezuela

2 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 about FLORENCE, ITALY

ISAKOS is going to Florence, Italy – An Ultimate Meeting Destination! Florence is a city of sublime art and beauty, and casts a spell in a 2007 way that few places can. Set in a valley on the banks of the Arno, this captivating city is home to some of the most outstanding art PROGRAM collections in the world. From museums filled with breathtaking art by Giotto, Botticelli and Michelangelo and Renaissance gardens to fashionable cafés with scrumptious Tuscan cuisine, Florence has an COMMITTEE endless amount of activities for everyone. Lars Engebretsen, Chair, Norway Florence is an open-air museum, a living monument to the Italian Kazunori Yasuda, Deputy Chair, Japan Renaissance and home to artists and intellectuals of the calibre of Dante, Petrarch, Machiavelli, Michelangelo, Botticelli and Ron Arbel, Israel Leonardo da Vinci. John Bartlett, Australia The congress will take place within the Fortezza da Basso, a Medicean M. Nedim Doral, Turkey fortress built in 1536 by Giuliano di Sangallo. All hotels are located Anastasios Georgoulis, Greece within walking distance to the conference facility. Philippe Hardy, France The hardest part of your Florence visit will be deciding what to do first! Christopher Harner, USA Getting To and Staying in Don Johnson, Canada Robert Johnson, USA Florence, Italy William Kibler, USA Flying to Florence Seung-Ho Kim, Korea Congress attendees can fly into the Florence Peter Myers, Australia “Amerigo Vespucci” which is located only four (4) kilometers from the city Philippe Neyret, France center. The Florence Airport provides direct flights to the main European Richard Parker, USA cities, which makes it easy to reach any final destination in the world. Ronald Selby, USA For more information on the Florence Airport, please visit Niek van Dijk, The Netherlands http://www.aeroporto.firenze.it. Savio Woo, USA It is also possible to fly into the Pisa International Airport “Galileo Galilei,” Eduardo Zamudio, Chile which is located fifty (50) minutes by train into the Florence Central Railway Station. For more information on the Pisa Airport, please visit http://www.pisa-airport.com.

Ground Transportation The Florence Central Railway Station (Santa Maria Novella) is centrally located and is within walking distance to the Congress facilities and many hotels. Direct Eurostar trains are available from Florence to , and Naples. For more information on train schedules and ticket reservations, please visit www.trenitalia.com/home/en/index.html. Local busses (ATAF) and white RADIO TAXI cars are also available for convenient transportation around Florence.

Hotel Accommodations ISAKOS will offer special congress rates at a number of hotels in Florence. Hotel Reservation Information can be found on page 36. Hotel reservations can be made by visiting www.oic.it/isakos2007. Room Reservation Deadline: March 27, 2007.

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 3 quick facts FLORENCE, ITALY

Florence Weather Florence enjoys a moderate climate during May and June. The average high temperature is 72° F / 24° C; the average low is 55° F / 13° C.

Electricity Florence runs on 230 volts generated at 50 Hz.

Time 6 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time (USA).

Currency The Italian unit of currency is the Euro. Visit http://www.xe.com/ucc/ for more information on the exchange rate.

Passports & Visas* U.S. citizens do not need a visa for tourist or business travel to Italy. Those attendees that do require a visitor visa for travel to Italy should generally apply at the Italian Embassy or Consulate with jurisdiction over their place or state of permanent residence.

Additional Resources* For additional information on Florence and visiting Italy, please visit the following: http://www.traveldocs.com/it/vr.htm http://www.ambwashingtondc.esteri.it http://www.firenze.net

99% of the 2005 ISAKOS Congress attendees said they would attend an ISAKOS congress again, and 100% said they would recommend the congress to their colleagues.

* Information provided here regarding visas and passports is supplied as a courtesy. ISAKOS is NOT responsible for any errors, changes, or omissions in the information listed above. Please consult your consulate when planning your travel.

4 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 about the CONGRESS

CME Hours This activity has been planned and WHAT WILL THE implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and policies of the 2007 CONGRESS Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through CONTENT the joint sponsorship of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and the International Society of Arthroscopy, CONTAIN? Knee Surgery and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine. The American Scientific Papers Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons is accredited by the ACCME to sponsor continuing medical education for physicians. Scientific E-posters The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons designates Surgical Skills Workshops this educational activity for a maximum of 31 AMA PRA Category Daily Live Cadaver Demonstrations 1 Credits™. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Debates Instructional Course Lectures Meeting Location Symposia Registration, technical exhibits, breaks, and all meeting sessions will be held at the Spandolini Pavilion of the Fortezza da Basso Internet Café in Florence, Italy. Technical Exhibits Fortezza da Basso Social Events Spandolini Pavilion Viale Strozzi, 1 Spouse Program Florence, Italy Knot-Tying Workshops Registration On-Site and Badge Pick-up On-site registration and badge pick-up will open at 14:00h on Saturday, May 26. The registration counters will be located in the Foyer of the Spandolini Pavilion of the Fortezza da Basso. Registration will be open every day during the following hours: Saturday, May 26 14:00 – 17:00 Sunday, May 27 07:00 – 17:00 Monday, May 28 07:00 – 17:00 Tuesday, May 29 07:00 – 12:30 Wednesday, May 30 07:00 – 17:00 Thursday, May 31 07:00 – 12:30

www.isakos.com

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 5 about the CONGRESS

Breakfasts and Breaks E-Poster Exhibits Breakfasts and Breaks will be available daily for all registered E-Poster computer stations will be located throughout attendees beginning at 07:00 on Sunday, May 27. the meeting area. A CD-ROM containing every poster Lunches will not be provided free of charge to attendees; presentation will be distributed to all congress attendees. however, a number of concession stands will be available. Lunchtime Breakout Sessions Instructional Course Lectures A lunchtime series of hands-on laboratories and lectures will Instructional course lectures will be free of charge to all allow attendees to gain hands-on experience while learning attendees. Please see page 29 for more information. the latest innovations in research and techniques. The sessions will be located at the Spandolini Pavilion of Live Surgical Demonstrations the Fortezza da Basso and will last 90 minutes on Sunday, Live surgical demonstrations will be available throughout the Monday and Wednesday. Topics are likely to include congress, free of charge to all attendees, as part of the meniscus repair, ACL and PCL reconstruction, shoulder general session. Tickets are not required. stabilization, rotator cuff repair and Alex shoulder model workshops. Please see page 8 for descriptions of the scheduled demonstrations. The sessions are free of charge to all congress registrants. Attendance will be awarded on a first-come, first-served basis. Technical Exhibits Dates: Sunday, Monday and Wednesday Attendees must be registered for the meeting in order to Time: 12:00–13:30 access the exhibit area. Exhibits will be situated in the Foyer Cost: Included in Registration of the Spandolini Pavilion of the Fortezza da Basso. A complete listing of all technical exhibits will be available Internet Café on-site. Technical exhibits will be open: All meeting attendees are welcome to check their e-mail and Sunday, May 27 07:00 – 16:00 explore the World Wide Web for free at the ISAKOS Internet Café. Monday, May 28 07:00 – 16:00 The Internet Café will be open daily during congress hours. Tuesday, May 29 07:00 – 12:30 Wednesday, May 30 07:00 – 16:00 Thursday, May 31 07:00 – 12:30

6 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 special spouse EVENT PROGRAM

Welcome Reception Enjoy the ISAKOS Congress as a at the Fortezza da Basso registered spouse for the week in Florence. Spouse Program ISAKOS welcomes all congress attendees and registration fees are $40 for the REG their guests to the ISAKOS Welcome Reception. spouse daily breakfast program at ISTE This grand, festive affair is a highlight of the O R the Fortezza da Basso and spouse PA N n G congress, offering music, hors d’oeuvres and directory. See the ISAKOS E 37 cocktails to all congress attendees and their Congress Registration Form to families. register. Attendance is included with the cost of registration. Dress is business casual. o Date: Sunday, May 27 Saturday, May 26 14:00 – 17:00 Registration Open Time: 18:30 – 21:00 i Cost: Included in registration. Sunday, May 27 07:30 – 09:30 Morning Coffee Guests are welcome. Begin your day with coffee and assorted pastries with other

t spouses in the Spouse Lounge at the Fortezza da Basso. Location: Fortezza da Basso 18:30 –21:00 Welcome Reception This grand and festive affair, one of the many highlights of the congress, offers music, hors d’oeuvres and cocktails to p all congress attendees and their guests at no additional cost. Dress is business casual. e Monday, May 28 07:30 – 09:30 Morning Coffee Begin your day with coffee and assorted pastries with other spouses in the Spouse Lounge at the Fortezza da Basso. c

Tuesday, May 29 07:30 – 09:30 Morning Coffee

e Begin your day with coffee and assorted pastries with other spouses in the Spouse Lounge at the Fortezza da Basso.

r Wednesday, May 30 07:30 – 09:30 Morning Coffee Begin your day with coffee and assorted pastries with other spouses in the Spouse Lounge at the Fortezza da Basso.

Thursday, May 31 07:30 – 09:30 Morning Coffee Begin your day with coffee and assorted pastries with other spouses in the Spouse Lounge at the Fortezza da Basso.

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 7 live surgical DEMONSTRATIONS

ISAKOS is offering a series of live surgical demonstrations on 11:30 ROOM 102 cadavers, free to all attendees. All demonstrations will take Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Footprint Repair Using Non-Knot place in the Fortezza da Basso. Tying Suture Anchors James Esch, MD (USA) and Michael Terry, MD (USA) Sunday, May 27 Sponsored by Smith & Nephew 14:00 General Session Room Surgeons will repair a massive RC tear utilizing standard method Novel Double Tunnel Anatomical ACL Reconstruction with a non-knot tying threaded anchor system as well as a new Matteo Denti, MD (Italy) and Piero Volpi, MD (Italy) method to achieve a footprint repair. Sponsored by DePuy Mitek 12:00 ROOM 102 15:30 ROOM 101 Current Concepts in Arthroscopic RC Repair Using the Dual Anatomic ACL Reconstruction Using an Osteoconductive Row Triangle Repair Method Interference Screw Sumant “Butch” Krishnan, MD (USA) Pascal Christel, MD, PhD (France) and Darren Johnson, MD (USA) Sponsored by DePuy Mitek Sponsored by Smith & Nephew Surgeons will learn the most current indications and techniques A multiple tunnel anatomic ACL reconstruction will be for arthroscopic dual-row rotator cuff repair. In addition to basic performed using the new Christel Instrument Set and the principles of rotator cuff repair in general, surgeons will CALAXO Interference Screw. understand the nuances of portal placement/access, suture management, anchor placement, and knot security. The techniques demonstrated have been biomechanically confirmed Monday, May 28 to restore both the native footprint of the rotator cuff as well as 11:00 ROOM 102 the tendon security to bone to improve healing. Knotless Slap/Bankart Repair and Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Repair Wednesday, May 30 John Uribe, MD (USA) 11:15 ROOM 101 Sponsored by ArthroCare MIS 4-in-1 Surgical Approach See the latest technology in arthroscopic, knotless rotator cuff, Paolo Aglietti, MD (Italy) Bankart and SLAP repair. Sponsored by Zimmer 14:00 ROOM 101 Zimmer® MIS™ Multi-Reference® 4-in-1 Surgical Technique utilizing Chondral Defect Repair Using Synthetic Resorbable the Gender Solutions™ NexGen® LPS-Flex Total Knee System. Osteochondral Plugs 14:00 ROOM 102 Christoph Erggelet, MD, PhD (Germany) and Combined ACL RetroConstruction and High Tibial Osteotomy Nicholas Sgaglione, MD (USA) Sponsored by Smith & Nephew Giancarlo Puddu, MD (Italy) and Annunziato Amendola, MD (USA) Sponsored by Arthrex Focal chondral lesions will be repaired with a novel synthetic scaffold to achieve surface and tissue restoration of the cartilage High Tibial Osteotomy and ACL Reconstruction is a common and bone. combination. The demonstration includes: new ACL tunnel placement technique in respect to HTO planing and Tuesday, May 29 performance. 10:00 General Session Room 15:00 ROOM 101 Two Tunnel PCL Reconstruction Advances in Hip Labral Repair Using Osteoconductive Greg Fanelli, MD (USA) Suture Anchors Sponsored by Arthrotek Marc Philippon, MD (USA) and Michael Leunig, MD (Switzerland) Combined ACL/PCL reconstruction using a new biological Sponsored by Smith & Nephew ingrowth fixation system. Surgeons will demonstrate arthroscopic treatment for femoro- acetabular impingement and repair of the hip labrum.

8 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 advances in KNEE ARTHROPLASTY

Saturday, May 26, 2007 REGISTER ONLINE 08:45 Welcome R FOR THE PRE- Paolo Aglietti COURSE AT 08:50 The John Insall Legacy E WWW.ISAKOS.COM Michael Kelly e

T Registration Fees are 09:00–10:30 First Session – High Performance Total Knee Moderators: Johan Bellemans and Kelly Vince US$250 for Non-ISAKOS s members and US$200 Daniel Berry High Performance S Jan Victor Guided Motion for ISAKOS members. J. David Blaha Medial Pivot I Leo Whiteside CR Cementless CME credits will be Richard Komistek Kinematics in mobile and fixed TKA r offered. Michael Ries Bearing Materials G Discussion – 30 minutes E 10:30–11:00 Coffee break u

11:00–12:30 Second Session–Surgical Technique: MIS & Navigation R Moderators: Philippe Neyret and Richard Scott Peter Bonutti MIS Paolo Aglietti EM Navigation

John Bartlett Soft Tissue Balancing o Johan Bellemans Navigation and Balancing WHO SHOULD Jean-Yves Jenny Accuracy with Navigation Chitranjan Ranawat Overview 2007 ATTEND THE Discussion–30 minutes

12:30–14:00 Lunch 2007 ISAKOS

14:00–15:30 Third Session–Partial Knee Replacement Moderators: Dieter Kohn and Mark Pagnano CONGRESS? Christopher Dodd Mobile UNI C Philippe Neyret Lateral UNI Any health care practitioner, who Jean-Noel Argenson High flex UNI specializes in arthroscopy, knee Sergio Romagnoli Bicompartmental UNI surgery or orthopaedic sports Jess Lonner Patellofemoral Arthroplasty medicine, including:

Richard Scott Overview 2007 - Discussion–30 minutes • Orthopaedic surgeons • Orthopaedic physician 15:30–16:00 Coffee break assistants 16:00–17:30 Fourth Session–Revision Update • Physical therapists Moderators: John Bartlett and Leo Whiteside e Giles Scuderi Stem Extensions • Orthopaedic residents Mark Pagnano Bone Loss and TM Edward Keating Recuvatum • Orthopaedic fellows

Dieter Kohn Stiff TKA r Kelly Vince Instability ISAKOS offers reduced registration Nadim Hallab Metal Sensitivity fees for residents, fellows and allied Discussion–30 minutes health care professionals. 18:00 Adjourn

www.isakos.com P

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 9 program at a glance S Y e N 0 0 A s O 1 r 3 3 I :

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10 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Sunday, May 27

GENERAL SESSION ROOM ROOM 101

8:30–8:40 President’s and Program Chair’s 10:00–11:30 Symposium: Arthroscopic Surgical Interventions Opening Remarks in the Hip–Do We Have the Science to Back it up? John Bergfeld, MD, USA and Michael Dienst, MD, Chair, Germany Lars Engebretsen, MD, PhD, Norway 11:30–12:00 Mini-Symposium: Osteochondral 8:40 – 9:10 ESSKA Lectures agendaTransplantations–Do We have the Evidence? Anthony Miniaci, MD, FRCSC, Chair, USA 9:10 – 9:40 AOSSM Lectures 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops 9:40 –10:00 Presidential Guest Lecture To Be Determined 14:00–15:00 Papers #9–16 10:00–11:00 Symposium: Stem Cells: The Real Answer or 15:00–15:30 Lecture: How I Treat Patellar Instability in a More Problems Patient with Patella Alta, Femoral Dysplasia Mats Brittberg, Chair, Sweden and Knee Pain Elizabeth Arendt, MD, USA and 11:00–11:30 Mini-Symposium: Surgical Treatment of Muscle David DeJour, MD, France Injuries: Do We Have the Science to Back it up? Sakari Orava, MD, PhD, Chair, Finland 15:30–16:30 Live Surgical Demonstration: Anatomic ACL Reconstruction Using an Osteoconductive 11:30–12:00 Papers #1–4 Interference Screw 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops Pascal Christel, MD, PhD, France and Darren Johnson, MD, USA 13:30–14:00 Highlight Lecture #1: Sick Tendons – From Surgery to Molecular Biology 16:30–18:30 Papers #17–32 Karim Khan, Canada 18:30–20:00 Welcome Reception 14:00–15:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: Novel Double Tunnel Anatomical ACL Reconstruction Matteo Denti, MD, Italy and Piero Volpi, MD, Italy 15:00–16:00 Symposium: NSAIDs and Tissue Healing Sigbjorn Dimmen, MD, Chair, Norway 16:00–16:15 Lecture: Single or Double Bundle ACL Technique – The Tibial & Femoral Tunnel Locations Revisited William Clancy, Jr., MD, USA 16:15–17:15 Symposium: The Effect of ACL Registries on the Practice of ACL Surgery Martin Lind, MD, PhD, Chair, Denmark 17:15–18:00 Symposium: The Sensory Function of Ligaments in the Knee and Shoulder Michael Krogsgaard, MD, PhD, Chair, Denmark 18:00–18:30 Papers #5–8 18:30–20:00 Welcome Reception

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 11 Sunday, May 27

ROOM 102 ROOM 201

10:00 –10:30 Papers #33–36 10:00 –12:00 Papers #65–80 10:30 –12:00 Symposium: The Frozen Shoulder Revisited 12:00 –13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops Roger Hackney, FRCS, Chair, United Kingdom 14:00 –18:00 TEAM PHYSICIAN’S COURSE: 12:00 –13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops agendaLecture: My Life as a Team Physician John Bergfeld, MD, USA 14:00–15:00 Papers #37–44 Lecture: Where are Your Loyalties: 15:00 –16:00 Symposium: Treatment of Arthritis in the Coach, Team or Athlete? Athletic Shoulder Per Renström, MD, PhD, Sweden Philippe Hardy, MD, Chair, France Lecture: Medico-Legal Issues 16:00 –18:30 Papers #45–64 of the Team Physician 18:30 –20:00 Welcome Reception Richard Parker, MD, USA Lecture: Assessment and Management: Grade 1-2 Injuries Halit Pinar, MD, Turkey Lecture: Grade 3 Isolated Injuries: Treatment Options Toru Fukubayashi, MD, Japan Lecture: Combined MCL and ACL Injuries: Treatment Options Myles Coolican, FRACS, Australia Lecture: Complex Knee Ligament Injuries Bruce Twaddle, FRACS, New Zealand Lecture: Results of an International Survey of MCL Treatments Francois Kelberine, MD, France Lectures: Football (Soccer): International Round Up Lecture: Tennis Injuries: New Trend for Elite Players Rogerio Da Silva, MD, Brazil Lecture: The Role of Surfaces, Shoes and Studs in Injury Peter Myers, MBBS, FRACS, Australia Lecture: Tips and Techniques in Taping Professional Athletes Dimitr Jontschew, MD, Germany Lecture: Degenerative Conditions Affecting Past Elite Athletes Gian Luigi Canata, MD, Italy 18:00 –18:30 Papers #81–84 18:30 –20:00 Welcome Reception

12 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Monday, May 28

GENERAL SESSION ROOM ROOM 101

8:45 –9:00 Introduction of International 10:00–11:00 Symposium: ISAKOS Knee Committee: Mini- Society Presidents Invasive Knee Arthroplasty–Do We Have the Evidence to Back This Up? 9:00 –9:30 APOSSM Lectures Philippe Neyret, MD, Chair, France 9:30 –10:00 Presidential Lecture 11:00–12:00 Symposium: Navigation in Knee Surgery: John Bergfeld, MD, USA agenda Nice to Have or Must Have? 10:00 –11:00 Symposium: Evidence Based Criteria for Return Burt Klos, MD, Chair, Netherlands to Sports After Ligament Surgery 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops Robert Johnson, MD, Chair, USA 14:00–15:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: 11:00 –12:00 Symposium: The Future of Sports Medicine Chondral Defect Repair Using Synthetic Gary Poehling, MD, USA and Resorbable Osteochondral Plugs Savio Woo, PhD, DSc, USA, Co-Chairs Christoph Erggelet, MD, PhD, Germany and 12:00 –13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops Nicholas Sgaglione, MD, USA 13:30–14:00 Highlight Lecture #2: What Prevention Can 15:00–15:30 Mini-Symposium: Osteochondral Pathology of Do in Sports Medicine the Ankle: Debride or Replace Roald Bahr, MD, PhD, Norway C. Niek van Dijk, PhD, Chair, Netherlands 14:00 –15:00 Symposium: Clinical Decision Making in 15:30–16:00 Mini-Symposium: Groin Pain and Cartilage Lesions Using Evidence Based Medicine Sports Hernias Mitsuo Ochi, MD, PhD, Chair, Japan Jan Ekstrand, MD, PhD, Chair, Sweden 15:00 –16:30 Papers #85–96 16:00–16:30 Papers #97–100 16:30 –18:00 Symposium: Case Presentations and Discussion 16:30–18:00 Symposium: Current Concepts in the Treatment for Brazilian Soccer of Patellofemoral Arthritis Moises Cohen, MD, PhD, Chair, Brazil John Fulkerson, MD, Chair, USA

ROOM 102 ROOM 201

10:00–11:00 Symposium: New Aspects of Tendinopathy 10:00–10:20 Lecture: Knee Ligament Surgery in India Per Renström, MD, PhD, Chair, Sweden David Rajan, MS, India 11:00–12:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: Knotless 10:20–10:40 Lecture: Chondral Knee Lesions in Middle Age SLAP/Bankart Repair and Arthroscopic Rotator Tennis Players Cuff Repair Fernando Radice, MD, Chile John Uribe, MD, USA 10:40–11:00 Lecture: Pectoralis Major Injuries in Athletes 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops Benno Ejnisman, MD, Brazil 14:00–15:30 Symposium: Update on the Treatment of 11:00–12:00 Papers #109–116 Complete Rotator Cuff Tears Philippe Hardy, MD, Chair, France 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops 15:30–15:50 Lecture: My Experience with 1,000 Elbow Instabilities 14:00–18:00 Papers #117–148 James Andrews, MD, USA 15:50–16:50 Papers #101–108 16:50–18:00 Symposium: Management of Acute Elbow Dislocation Gregory Bain, MBBS, FRACS, Chair, Australia ROOM 103

12:15–13:15 ISAKOS Business Meeting I Members Only

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 13 Tuesday, May 29

GENERALGENERAL SESSIONSESSION ROOMROOM ROOM 101

8:45–9:15 AANA Lectures 9:15– 9:45 Symposium: The Future in TKA: 2007 vs. 2015: Will it all be MIS and CAS? 9:15 –10:00 John Joyce Award Finalists Rene Verdonk, MD, PhD, Belgium and Papers #149–153 Philippe Neyret, MD, France, Co-Chairs 10:00–11:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: agenda9:45–10:45 Symposium: Double Bundle ACL Two Tunnel PCL Reconstruction Reconstruction: Any Evidence Based Greg Fanelli, MD, USA Clinical Advantage? 11:00–12:30 Papers #154–165 Christopher Harner, MD, USA and Takeshi Muneta, MD, Japan, Co-Chairs 10:45– 11:45 Papers #166–173 11:45–12:30 Symposium: Evidence Based Approach to Foot and Ankle Injuries in Sports Annunziato Amendola, MD, Chair, USA

ROOM 102 ROOM 201

9:15 –10:15 Papers #174–181 9:15–10:45 Papers #187–198 10:15 –11:00 Richard Caspari Award Finalists 10:45–12:30 Papers #199–212 Papers #182–186 11:00–11:30 Lecture: Total Shoulder Reconstruction in Active Athletes Philippe Hardy, MD, France 11:30–12:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Footprint Repair Using Non-Knot Tying Suture Anchors James Esch, MD, USA and Michael Terry, MD, USA 12:00–12:30 Live Surgical Demonstration: Current Concepts in Arthroscopic RC Repair Using the Dual Row Triangle Repair Method ENJOY THE FIVE-DAY ISAKOS Sumant Krishnan, MD, USA MEETING ADVANTAGE: • Greater amount of continuing medical education (CME) credits • More time to network with world 5leaders in your specialty • Greater exposure to numerous papers, posters, courses and presentations • Five days to combine work and leisure • A better value for your travel time and money!

14 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Wednesday, May 30

GENERALROOM SESSION 102 ROOM ROOM 101

8:45–10:00 Award Presentations

10:00–10:30 SLARD Lectures 10:15–11:15 Symposium: Posterior and Multidirectional 10:30–11:15 Symposium: Current Concepts on Revision ACL Instability in the Shoulder Christopher Harner, MD, Chair, USA agendaSeung-Ho Kim, MD, Chair, Korea 11:15–12:00 Symposium: Complications in Arthroscopy 11:15–12:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: MIS 4-in-1 Gert Kristensen, MD, Chair, Denmark Surgical Approach Paolo Aglietti, MD, Italy 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops 13:30–14:00 Highlight Lecture #3: How to Build an Effective and Clinically Relevant Research Laboratory for 14:00–15:00 Papers #213–220 the Year 2020 15:00–16:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: Advances Savio Woo, PhD, DSc, USA in Hip Labral Repair Using Osteoconductive 14:00–14:45 Symposium: How to Plan Science in Sports Suture Anchors Bruce Beynnon, MD, Chair, USA Marc Philippon, MD, USA and Michael Leunig, MD, Switzerland 14:45–15:45 Symposium: New Developments in Surface, Materials and Fixation in Knee Replacements 16:00–17:00 Papers #221– 228 John Bartlett, MD, Chair, Australia 15:45–17:00 Symposium: Prevention of Muscle Injuries in Sports Julian Feller, FRACS, Chair, Australia 17:00–18:00 ISAKOS Business Meeting II (Members Only)

ROOM 102 ROOM 201

10:15–11:15 Symposium: Talar and Subtalar Ankle Instability 10:15–11:15 Symposium: Current Concepts of Niek van Dijk, PhD, Chair, Netherlands Osteotomies Around the Knee: Indications, Planning, Surgery and Results 11:15–12:00 Papers #229–234 Hans-Ulrich Staeubli, MD, PhD, Chair, Switzerland 12:00–13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops 11:15–12:00 Papers #243–248 14:00–15:00 Live Surgical Demonstration: Combined ACL 12:00 –13:30 Lunch and Breakout Workshops Retro Construction and High Tibial Osteotomy Giancarlo Puddu, MD, Italy and 14:00–15:00 Papers #249–256 Annunziato Amendola, MD, USA 15:00–16:00 Papers #257–264 15:00–16:00 Symposium: Current Concepts in Meniscal Regeneration 16:00–17:00 Symposium: Current Concepts in Rene Verdonk, MD, PhD, Chair, Belgium Knee Injuries in Children Romain Seil, MD, Chair, Luxembourg 16:00–17:00 Papers #235–242

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 15 Thursday, May 31

GENERAL SESSION ROOM

8:45–9:05 Highlight Lecture #4: Current Concepts in THE ISAKOS Cartilage Engineering Mitsuo Ochi, MD, PhD, Japan Web site m 9:05–10:00 ISAKOS Science Award Paper Finalists Papers #265–272 agenda o Register for the ISAKOS Congress 10:00–11:00 Symposium: Knee Rehabilitation from ACL Send your registration information Injury to Knee OA: How Can We Pick the Ones

online quickly and securely. c Who Need Surgery? How Can We Optimize Rehab After ACL Reconstruction? How Can We Reduce View and Download PF Pain? How Can We Reduce the Risk of

Current Publications . Developing OA? Return to Sports: When? Lynn Snyder-Mackler, ScD, PT, FAPTA, USA and The ISAKOS Web site features our

May Arna Risberg, PhD, Norway, Co-Chairs biannual newsletter, hosts a “Current s Concepts” section presenting current 11:00–11:15 Lecture: How I Do a Meniscal Transplantation surgical research for surgeons, and Rene Verdonk, MD, PhD, Belgium provides a link to its official journal, o 11:15–11:30 Lecture: How I Do Double Bundle ACL Arthroscopy: The Journal of Arthroscopic Kazunori Yasuda, MD, PhD, Japan & Related Surgery, where all of the published abstracts from the 1997, 1999, 11:30–11:45 Lecture: How I Do a Double Bundle PCL k 2001, 2003 and 2005 ISAKOS Congresses Christopher Harner, MD, USA can be viewed. 11:45–12:00 Lecture: How I Do a Trochleoplasty David DeJour, MD, France View ISAKOS’ Ongoing Projects a ISAKOS is continually approving courses 12:00–12:15 Lecture: How I Do a Femoral Osteotomy around the world and teaching centers s Giancarlo Puddu, MD, Italy where traveling fellows can apply to visit

12:15–12:30 Lecture: Sports and Knee Arthroplasty for varying amounts of time. Our Web i Michel Bonnin, MD, France site features a detailed listing of ISAKOS Approved Courses and ISAKOS Teaching

12:30 Adjourn . Centers with contact information and links.

For Members Only

Search the ISAKOS Membership w Directory online to find addresses, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail addresses of other members in your area. Also, access your online w subscription to Arthroscopy: The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery. w

16 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Scientific Papers

Sunday, May 27, 2007 Paper #7 Paper #13 Paper #19 GENERAL SESSION ROOM Chondrolysis After Arthroscopic Resection of The Human Anterior Paper #1 Continuous Intra-Articular the Lower Patellar Pole in Cruciate Ligament In Utero: Bupivacaine Infusion: An Patients with Chronic An Anatomical and The CD34+ Superficial Cell in Experimental Model Patellar Tendinosis Histological Study the Normal and Pathological

m Investigating Olaf Lorbach, MD, Germany Mario Ferretti, MD, USA Human Meniscus Chondrotoxicity in the Peter Verdonk, MD, Belgium Rabbit Shoulder Paper #14 Paper #20 o Paper #2 Brian J. Cole, MD, MBA, USA Magnetic Resonance Role of Mesenchymal Stem Imaging Measurement of the Cells in Synovial Fluid of The Effect of Local Paper #8 Two Bundles of the Normal Knee After Anterior Cruciate c Administration of Histological and Anterior Cruciate Ligament Ligament injury Interleukin-1 Receptor Immunohistochemical Steven B. Cohen, MD, USA Toshiyuki Morito, MD, Japan Antagonist on Mechanical

. Evaluation of Rotator Cuff Properties of the Tendon Overuse Model in Winstar Rats Paper #15 Paper #21 Tissue Shielded from Stress Benno Ejnisman, MD, Brazil MCL Rupture Need Not be A Prospective Comparison of s Shin Miyatake, MD, Japan Treated Operatively in Acute Patellar and Hamstring Sunday, May 27, 2007 Paper #3 Combined ACL and Grade III Tendon Grafts for ACL ROOM 101 o MCL Injuries. A Prospective Reconstruction Over 10 Years Histological and Paper #9 Randomized Study Justin P. Roe, FRACS, Australia Biomechanical Effects of Jyrki Halinen, MD, Finland Cell-based Therapy Using Reliability of Stress Paper #22 k Autologous Synovium- Radiographic Techniques to Paper #16 ACL Reconstruction with derived Fibroblasts on the Measure Isolated and Biomechanical and Bone-patellar Tendon-bone Tendon Graft in ACL Combined Posterior Laxity Kinematic Consequences Graft. A Longer Than 10-year Reconstruction: A Sheep Guido Garavaglia, MD, a of an Infrapatellar Fat Pad Follow-up Model Study Switzerland Edema on the Knee Massimo Cipolla, MD, Italy Taro Katsura, DVM, Japan s Michael Bohnsack, MD, Germany Paper #10 Paper #23 Paper #4 Classification of PCL and i Paper #17 How to Determine a Safe Immunological Combined Posterior Injuries The Use of 3D Knee Models Range of Knee Flexion Considerations in Based on Stress-Radiographs for Anatomic Evaluation of Angles for Fixation of the . Orthopaedic Xenografting Guido Garavaglia, MD, the ACL and ACL Grafts in Double Bundle ACL Kevin R. Stone, MD, USA Switzerland Reconstruction Reconstruction: A Human Paper #5 Paper #11 Willem Mare van der Merwe, Cadaveric Study MBChB FCS SA Ortho, Fabio Vercillo, MD, USA A Novel Analysis of In Vivo Multi-ligament Injuries of w South Africa Acromioclavicular Joint Motion the Knee: Detailed Analysis Paper #24 Jonathan Patrick Braman, MD, of Injury Mechanisms, Paper #18 Differences in Graft USA Management, and Validated Long Term Results of Orientation Using the Outcomes in a Large Cohort Anterior Cruciate Ligament Transtibial and Anteromedial w Paper #6 David Anthony Parker, FRACS, Reconstruction Combining a Portal Technique in ACL The Effect of Bupivicaine on Australia Patellar Tendon Graft with Reconstruction. An MRI Chondrocyte Viability In Bovine Paper #12 Extra-articular Tenodesis: Prospective Study Articular Cartilage Discs 118 Cases with 23 Years Michael Elias Hantes, MD, Greece w Ian King Yeung Lo, MD, Canada Prevention of Neurovascular Follow Up Injury by Posterior Capsular Jerome Pernin, France Release During Arthroscopic Transtibial Posterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: A Cadaveric Angiographic Study Joon Ho Wang, MD, PhD, Korea

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 17 Scientific Papers

Paper #25 Paper #32 Paper #38 Paper #45 Multiple Ligament Arthroscopic Management of Medial Rotator Cuff Failure Ultrasound Guided Reconstruction in Dislocated Tibial Plateau Fractures: A Following Arthroscopic Double Needling Combined with Knees: A Prospective Prospective Randomized Row Rotator Cuff Repair Extracorporal High Energy Evaluation of Autograft Clinical Study Ian King Yeung Lo, MD, Canada Shockwave Therapy for Reconstructions Roberto Buda, M.D., Italy Treatment of Tendinosis Dinshaw Noshir Pardiwala, Paper #39 Calcarea of the Shoulder: MS(Orth), DNB(Orth), FCPS, Sunday, May 27, 2007 A Biomechanical Study of Improvement of an India ROOM 102 Plate versus Intramedullary Established Treatment Fixation for Midshaft Clavicle Technique Paper #26 Paper #33 Fractures Christian Krasny, MD, Austria The Effect of Shock Wave Enhancement of Rotator Cuff Josh Baumfeld, MD, USA Treatment at the Tendon- Tendon-to-Bone Healing Paper #46 Bone Interface: A with Injectable progenitor Paper #40 Inman Was Right: Histomorphological and Cells-BMP-2 Hydrogel Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Verification of Glenohumeral Biomechanical Study in Chih-Hwa Chen, MD, Taiwan Repair: Prospective Motion In Vivo Rabbits Functional Outcome and Jonathan Patrick Braman, MD, Ching-Jen Wang, MD, Taiwan Paper #34 Repair Integrity at Minimum USA Functional and MR 2-Year Follow-up Paper #27 Arthrography Imaging Brian J. Cole, MD, MBA, USA Paper #47 How Much Effusion Is Evaluation After Arthroscopic Arthroscopic Versus Mini- Needed for a Positive Patella Single Row and Double Row Paper #41 Open rotator Cuff Repair Ballottment? Suture Anchor Repair Two Methods of Assessing with Suture Anchor Jung Ro Yoon, MD, Korea Francesco Franceschi, MD, Italy Inter-Rater Reliability of an Chin-Hwa Chen, MD, Taiwan Arthroscopic Evaluation of Paper #28 Paper #35 the Glenoid Labrum Paper #48 Prevalence of Abnormal Biomechanical Performance Treny M. Sasyniuk, MSc, Canada Experience with Partial Findings on Knee MRI in of Rotator Cuff Repairs with Humeral Head Resurfacing Asymptomatic NBA Humeral Rotation: A New Paper #42 Arthroplasty in Patients Basketball Players Rotator Cuff Repair Failure Acromio-Humeral Interval Diagnosed with Avascular Brian J. Cole, MD, MBA, USA Model Following Rotator Cuff Necrosis Christopher S. Ahmad, MD, USA Repair John William Uribe, MD, USA Paper #29 Michael R. Tracy, MD, USA Dutch Pain Relief after Paper #36 Paper #49 Artroscopic Knee Surgery: Arthroscopic Replacement of Paper #43 Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff A Prospective Randomised Severely Damaged Rotator Effective Postoperative Repair In Patients Younger Double-Blind Trial Cuff using a GraftJacket® Analgesia in Patients with Than Fifty Years Of Age Gino M.M.J. Kerkhoffs, MD, PhD, Allograft: Minimum One Year Arthroscopic Shoulder Surgery Joseph Philip Burns, MD, USA Switzerland Follow-up Joo Han Oh, MD, PhD, Korea Stephen J. Snyder, MD, USA Paper #50 Paper #30 Paper #44 Modified Suture May Normalised Knee Peak Paper #37 Long-Term Clinical and Enhance the Bone to Tendon Torque for Differences in The Relationship of the Anatomical Outcomes of Healing in Rotator Cuff Repair Body Size in 12/13 Year Olds Lateral Cord of the Brachial Arthroscopic Repair of Small Augustus D. Mazzocca, MD, USA Nicola Maffulli, MD MS PhD Plexus to the Coracoid and Moderate-Sized Rotator FRCS(Orth), United Kingdom Process during Arthroscopic Cuff Tears with Magnetic Paper #51 Coracoid Surgery–A Resonance Arthrography Original Endoscopic Portals Paper #31 Dynamic Cadaveric Study Control for Decompression of the Endoscopic Treatment of Haw Chong Chang, FRCSEd Matthieu Meyer, MD, France Suprascapular Nerve: An Popliteal Cyst (Orth), Singapore Anatomic Study Konrad Malinowski, MD, Poland Marc Soubeyrand, Resident, France

18 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Paper #52 Paper #58 Sunday, May 27, 2007 Paper #72 Anatomical Risks of Biomechanical Evaluation of ROOM 201 Pediatric Anterior Cruciate Shoulder Arthroscopy Different Anchor-Suture- Ligament Injuries: A Follow Portals: Anatomic Cadaveric Systems in Rotator Cuff Paper #65 Up Study Study Relating to Twelve Repair The Effects of Bone Marrow Sadashiva Hebri Somayaji, Portals of Current Use Andre Weimann, MD, Germany or Periosteum on Tendon-to- MBBS, MS, MRCS, Matthieu Meyer, MD, France Bone Tunnel Healing in a United Kingdom Paper #59 Rabbit Model Paper #53 How Many Anchors are Sinan Karaoglu, MD, Turkey Paper #73 Open versus Arthroscopic Necessary for Adequate Can We Differentiate Four Shoulder Stabilization for Fixation of Simple Type II Paper #66 Grading of the Pivot Shift Recurrent Traumatic Anterior SLAP Lesions Electrothermal Shrinkage for Test by Manual Shoulder Instability: A Eric C. McCarty, MD, USA the Lax Anterior Cruciate Examination? – Quantitative Comparison of Strength Ligament: A Look at Longer Evaluation of Dynamic and Endurance Deficits Paper #60 Term Results Rotational Instability During Laurie Anne Hiemstra, MD, PhD, Arthroscopic Suture Anchor Derek B. Smith, MD, Canada the Pivot Shift Test Canada Repair for Shoulder Masayoshi Yagi, MD, Japan Instability: A Prospective Paper #67 Paper #54 Study Comparing Arthroscopic Treatment of Paper #74 Open Capsular Shift and Absorbable and Non Adult ACL Tibial Avulsion PCL Impingement in ACL Tricorticocancellous Absorbable Sutures Fracture with Figure 8 Suture Reconstruction: A Potential Autogenous Bone Graft with Gustavo Cará Monteiro, MD, Fixation Technique Cause of Flexion Deficit Absorbable Pins in Patients Brazil Jin zhong Zhao, MD, China and Graft Elongation. with Recurrent Shoulder An Experimental and Dislocation with Large Paper #61 Paper #68 Clinical Study Engaging Hill-Sachs Lesion Pathologic Anatomy Associated The National Knee Ligament Karl Olof Eriksson, MD, PhD, Joo Han Oh, MD, PhD, Korea with Subluxations of the Registry in Norway Sweden Shoulder: Physical Examination, Lars-Petter Ness Granan, Norway Paper #55 Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Paper #75 The Next Generation and Arthroscopic Findings in Paper #69 Primary Repair with Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First-time, Traumatic, Anterior A Histological and Ultra- Semitendinosus Tendon Double Anchor Footprint Subluxations structural Evaluation of the Augmentation versus Fixation (DAFF) Bradley J. Nelson, MD, USA Patellar Tendon Ten Years Reconstruction Using Minoru Yoneda, MD PhD, Japan After Reharvesting its Patellar Tendon Autograft Paper #62 Central Third of acute anterior cruciate Paper #56 Surgical Management Of Mattias Lidén, MD, Sweden ligament injuries: 15 years Multicentric Study of Acromial Instability follow with respect on Surgical and Conservative Augustus D. Mazzocca, MD, USA Paper #70 stability and progression Treatment of Multidirectional A Meta-Analysis of Stability of osteoarthrosis Instability in Athletes Paper #63 Rates of Autografts Alwin Jaeger, MD, Germany Benno Ejnisman, MD, Brazil Effect of Coracoacromial Compared to Allografts for Ligament Release on Anterior Cruciate Ligament Paper #76 Paper #57 Dynamic Glenohumeral Reconstruction Is There a Potential for Graft Posterior Humeral Avulsion Stability Chadwick C. Prodromos, MD, USA Contamination During of the Glenohumeral Mathias Wellmann, MD, Preparation for Anterior Ligament (Posterior HAGL) Germany Paper #71 Cruciate Ligament Lesions: Correlation On the Relative Contribution Reconstruction? Between MRI, Clinical, and Paper #64 of the Two Main Anterior Michael Elias Hantes, MD, Greece Arthroscopic Findings Effect of An Anterior Glenoid Cruciate Ligament Robert John Schoderbek Jr., MD, Defect on Anterior Stability: Functional Bundles to Intact USA A Cadaveric Study Knee Kinematics Nobuyuki Yamamoto, MD, Japan Pierluigi Cuomo, MD, Italy

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 19 Scientific Papers

Paper #77 Paper #84 Paper #89 Paper #96 Comparison Between Single The Effects of TGF-beta1 Clinical 4-Year Follow-up on Differences of Surgically and Double Bundle ACL Supplement and TGF-beta1 Bipolar Radiofrequency Treated Achilles Tendon Reconstruction. A Neutralization on a Novel Treatment of Chronic Overuse Injuries in Finland Randomised Clinical Trial Tissue-engineered Tendon. Tendinosis and Italy Francesco Giron, MD, PhD, Italy Model: Micro-mechanical James P. Tasto, MD, USA Sakari Y. Orava, MD, PhD, Evaluations of Collagen Finland Paper #78 Fascicles Paper #90 Tibial Interference Screw Chinatsu Azuma, MD, Japan The Additional Value of a Monday, May 28, 2007 Material Does Not Affect Night Splint to Eccentric ROOM 101 Bone Tunnel Enlargement Monday, May 28, 2007 Exercises in Chronic Following Hamstring Tendon GENERAL SESSION ROOM Midportion Achilles Paper #97 ACL Reconstruction Tendinopathy: A Randomised Arthroscopic Subtalar Julian A. Feller, FRACS, Australia Paper #85 Controlled Trial Arthrodesis using Three ROS Production and Muscle Hans Tol, PhD, Netherlands Posterior Potals Paper #79 Damage Prevention in Keun-Bae Lee, MD, Korea ACL Augmentation Eccentric Exercise Paper #91 Procedure with One-incision Yoshinobu Maruhashi, MD, Japan Blood Flow Imaging (BFI) Paper #98 Technique: Anteromedial Enhances the Visualization Changes of Achilles Mid- Bundle or Posterolateral Paper #86 of Neovascularisation in portion Tendon Bundle Reconstruction Eccentric Training and a Tendinosis. Presentation of a Microcirculation After Nobuo Adachi, MD, PhD, Japan Pneumatic Achilles Wrap New Ultrasound-doppler Repetitive Simultaneous Reduce Increased Achilles Technique. Cryotherapy and Compression Paper #80 Tendon Capillary Blood Flow, Agnar Tegnander, MD, PhD, Using Standardized Cryo- The Effect of Deficient and Reduce Capillary Venous Norway compression Device Reconstructed Anterior Filling Pressures and (Cryo/Cuff™) Cruciate Ligament on Increase Tendon Oxygen Paper #92 Karsten Knobloch, MD, Germany Rotational Stability of the Knee Saturation in Insertional and The Use of Radiofrequency Willem Mare van der Merwe, Mid-portion Tendinopathy– For the Treatment of Chronic Paper #99 MBChB FCS SA Ortho, A Randomized Trial Tendinosis Fully Arthroscopic South Africa Karsten Knobloch, MD, Germany James P. Tasto, MD, USA Osteochondral Autograft Technique in Restoring Paper #81 Paper #87 Paper #93 Chondral Defects of the Mitochondrial Dysfunction Non-invasive Treatment The 3D Repair: Anterolateral Talus: Technique and Eight Correlates with Options for the Management Portal for Retrograde Suture Years Prospective Study Mitochondrial DNA Damage of Recalcitrant Chronic Passage in Arthroscopic Francesco Allegra, MD, Italy Induced by Nitric Ozide in Achilles Tendinopathy Rotator Cuff Repair Human Chondrocytes Jan D. Rompe, MD, Germany Keith D. Nord, MD, MS, USA Paper #100 Albert Pearsall, MD, USA Middle Term and Long Term Paper #88 Paper #94 Results of Interosseous Paper #82 Early Motion and Weight 3 Year Follow Up of Talocalcaneal Ligament A Tissue-Engineered Bearing after Turn Down Arthroscopic Treatment for Reconstruction with Approach to Tendon and Repairs of Acute Achilles Recalcitrant Lateral Arthroscopy Ligament Reconstruction Tendon Ruptures: Results of Epicondylitis in Workers Norio Usami, MD, Japan Patrick William Whitlock, MD, 80 Consecutive Cases Comp and Non-workers PhD, USA James S. Keene, MD, USA Comp Patients Christian Lattermann, MD, USA Paper #83 Ion Channels in Human Paper #95 Tenocytes Pectoralis Major Muscle Merzesh Magra, MRCS, Rupture in Athletes United Kingdom Alberto Castro Pochini, MD, Brazil

20 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Monday, May 28, 2007 Paper #108 Paper #114 Paper #120 ROOM 102 Comparison of Elbow Valgus The Reconstruction of the Second-look Arthroscopic Laxity Using Radiographic Medial Patellofemoral Evaluations of Anatomic Paper #101 and Non-Radiographic Ligament with a Double-bundle Anterior Osteochondral Fragment Objective Measurements Semitendinosus Autograft. Cruciate Ligament Fixation Using Marc Raymond Safran, MD, USA A New Technique Using an Reconstruction Osteochondral Autograft Interference Fit Anchoring Eiji Kondo, MD, Japan (Berlet Technique) for Monday, May 28, 2007 System Osteochondritis Dissecans of ROOM 201 Yuji Uchio, MD, PhD, Japan Paper #121 the Humeral Capitellum Should the Femoral Tunnel Harehiko Tsukada, MD, Japan Paper #109 Paper #115 be at the 1 or 2 o’clock Differential Forces Within Arthroscopic Treatment of Position in One Bundle ACL Paper #102 the Proximal Patellar Tendon the First Patella Dislocation Reconstruction? Outcome of Ulnar Collateral as an Explanation for the Alberto Pienovi, MD, Argentina Peter Faunoe, MD, Denmark Ligament Reconstruction of Characteristic Lesion of the Elbow Using Hamstring Patellar Tendinopathy Paper #116 Paper #122 Allografts Edwin Mark Dillon, MbChB, Isolated Reconstruction of Tunnel Widening in Sheep. Stephen J. Nicholas, MD, USA South Africa the Posterolateral Corner A Radiological, MRI and Bent Wulff Jakobsen, MD, Histological Study Paper #103 Paper #110 Denmark Mark Clatworthy, FRACS, Arthroscopic Treatment of In vivo Motion Analysis of New Zealand Combined TFCC Tears; A the Patella in Patients with Paper #117 New Clinical Entity Recurrent Patellar In Vivo Evaluation of Paper #123 Michael R. Redler, MD, USA Dislocation Using Three- Residual Antero-medial Comparison of Closed and Dimensional Computer Laxity During ACL Open Kinetic Chain Paper #104 Model Reconstruction Rehabilitation in Patients Arthroscopic Treatment of Yuzo Yamada, MD, Japan Stefano Zaffagnini, MD, Italy with Anterior Cruciate Dorsal Wrist Ganglion Using Ligament Deficiency: A Radial Volar Portal Paper #111 Paper #118 Randomised Controlled Trial Luigi A. Pederzini, MD, Italy Relationship Between Is There a Correlation Sofi Tagesson, RPT, Sweden Patella Height and Between Subjective IKDC Paper #105 Successful MPFL Scores and Both Pivot Shift Paper #124 Fractures of the Radial Head: Reconstruction and KT-1000 Measurements Can the 10:30 Femoral Short Term Results Using a Pieter J. Erasmus, MBChB MMed, Following Anterior Cruciate Tunnel Position be Achieved New Arthroscopic Fixation South Africa Ligament Reconstruction? Through a Tibial Tunnel or Technique Timothy S. Whitehead, MBBS, Must an Anteromedial Portal Paolo Rolla, MD, Italy Paper #112 FRACS, Australia be Used? Peracetic Acid-ethanol Josh Baumfeld, MD, USA Paper #106 Sterilization Inhibits the Paper #119 The ''Muscular Hernia Sign:'' Remodeling of Soft-tissue Prospective Randomized Paper #125 An Original Ultrasonographic Allografts for Anterior Study Compairing Single vs Posterolateral Knee Sign to Detect Lesions of the Cruciate Ligament Double Bundle (four tunnels Reconstruction with Double Forearm's Interosseous Reconstruction: An out-in) STG ACL Graft Technique Using the Membrane Experimental Study in the Reconstruction Hamstrings. A Marc Soubeyrand, Resident, Sheep Model Luigi A. Pederzini, MD, Italy Biomechanical Study France Sven U. Scheffler, MD, Germany Jose Wilson Serbino, Jr., MD, Brazil Paper #107 Paper #113 Why Plate? Fractures of the The Influence of Patella Distal Radius: A Unique Bracing on Knee Kinematics Approach and Patella Biomechanics M. Ather Ather Mirza, MD, USA Michael Bohnsack, MD, Germany

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 21 Scientific Papers

Paper #126 Paper #132 Paper #139 Paper #146 The Protective Effects of Gender Specific Thicknesses Osteochondral Injury Is the Popliteofibular Axial Compression on the of the PCL from Femoral Associated with Lateral Ligament, the Proximal Posterior Cruciate Ligament Origin to Tibial Insertion in Dislocation of the Patella Insertion of the Popliteus Kathryne Stabile, MD, USA the Midline Sagittal Plane Myles Raphael Coolican, FRACS, Muscle and the Arcuate Hans-Ulrich Staeubli, MD, PhD, Australia Ligament the Same Paper #127 Switzerland Structure? An Anatomic and Biomechanical Studies Paper #140 Terminological Study of Popliteus Bypass or Paper #133 Tuberositas Transfer for Eduardo Luis Vieira, MD, Brazil Popliteofibular Ligament Periosteal Autologous Patellar Maltracking, Patellar Reconstructions in Chondrocyte Implantation Instability versus Lateral Paper #147 Conjunction With PCL for Patellar Chondral Defect Tracking Patella The Anatomical Variants of the Graft Reconstruction in Patients with Normal and Sander Koëter, MD, Netherlands Gateway to the Gastrocnemio- David R. McAllister, MD, USA Abnormal Patellar Tracking Semimembranosus Bursa in Ian J. Henderson, FRACS, Paper #141 the Posteromedial Region of Paper #128 Australia Database for Knee Ligament the Knee: An Arthroscopic Multiple Ligament Injuries: A Method for Classification and Their Reconstruction in the Knee Paper #134 Prospective Data Collection Relationship with Baker's Cysts Bent Wulff Jakobsen, MD, Patellofemoral and and Analysis Vittorio Calvisi, Italy Denmark Patellotibial Ligaments: Yiannis Pengas, MRCS, Anatomy and Biomechanics United Kingdom Paper #148 Paper #129 Elizabeth A. Arendt, MD, USA The Influence of 6 Weeks Active Nonoperative Paper #142 Preventative Patellofemoral Treatment of Acute Isolated Paper #135 Arthroscopic Knee Training Bracing on the Quadriceps Posterior Cruciate Ligament Autologous Chondrocyte Using a Porcine Model Muscle Strength: A Injury by Cylinder Cast with Implantation for the Adriano Marchetto, MD, MS, Prospective Study Tibial Supporter Treatment of Patellofemoral Brazil Damien Van Tiggelen, PT, Belgium Se-jin Park, MD, Korea Chondral Defects Jack Farr, MD, USA Paper #143 Tuesday, May 29, 2007 Paper #130 Subchondral Insufficiency GENERAL SESSION ROOM Arthroscopic PCL Paper #136 Fracture Complicating Reconstruction: 4 versus Repair of the Medial Arthroscopic Knee Surgery Paper #149 7-stranded Hamstring Patellofemoral Ligament in Samuel John Macdessi, MBBS, Lower Extremity Tendon Grafts Primary Dislocation of the FRACS, Australia Neuromuscular Activation Jin zhong Zhao, MD, China Patella. A Prospective and Biomechanical Randomised Study Paper #144 Compensations Five Years Paper #131 Svend Erik Christiansen, MD, A Bioscaffold to Enhance Following ACL Combined Reconstruction Denmark Neo-tissue Formation in the Reconstruction of CHronic Posterior Patellar Tendon Donor Site John Nyland, EdD, USA Cruciate Ligament and Paper #137 and to Limit Adhesion Posterolateral Corner The Anatomy of the Knee Formation with the Fat Pad: Paper #150 Deficiency: A 2 – 9 Year Lateral Retinaculum A Morphological Study Tibiofemoral Kinematics Follow Up Study Azhar M Merican, BM, MSOrth, Tan Duy Nguyen, MD, USA Following Anatomic Sadashiva Hebri Somayaji, United Kingdom Reconstruction of the MBBS, MS, MRCS, United Paper #145 Double Bundles of the Kingdom Paper #138 Postarthroscopic Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction of the Medial Osteonecrosis Following Yoshitsugu Takeda, MD, PhD, Patellofemoral Ligament in Arthroscopic Meniscectomy: Japan Patients with Lateral Fact or Fiction? Instability of the Patella Dietrich Pape, MD, Germany Martin Lind, MD, PhD, Denmark

22 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Paper #151 Paper #158 Paper #164 Paper #170 Do ACL Allograft Culture Prevention of Injuries Among Biomechanical Evaluation of Early Postoperative Results Correlate with Male Football Players: A Minimal Invasive Repairs for Functional Recovery in Clinical Infections? Prospective, Randomized Complete Acromioclavicular Simultaneous Bilateral James H. Lubowitz, MD, USA Intervention Study Targeting Joint Dislocation MIS-TKA: A Prospective Players with Previous Mathias Wellmann, MD, Randomized Study Paper #152 Injuries or Reduced Function Germany Myung Chul Lee, MD, PhD, Does Double-Bundle PCL Anders Engebretsen, Norway Korea Reconstruction Really Paper #165 Provide Better Stability Than Paper #159 Hip Range of Motion in Paper #171 Single-Bundle Can Lower Extremities Professional Baseball Players In Vivo Determination of 3D Reconstruction? A Overuse Injuries be Marc J. Philippon, MD, USA Kinematics of the Patello- Biomechanical Analysis Prevented Using an Exercise femoral and Tibio-femoral Alexandre Estevao Vamos Kokron, Program Aiming at Known Tuesday, May 29, 2007 Joint in Patients with TKA MD, PhD, Brazil Intrinsic Risk Factors–a RCT ROOM 101 Pre- and Postoperatively of 1000 Subjects Rüdiger von Eisenhart-Rothe, MD, Paper #153 Christoffer Brushoj, MD, Denmark Paper #166 MBA, Germany Semitendinosus Tendon Total Knee Arthroplasty for Regeneration After ACL Paper #160 Valgus Deformity Corrected Paper #172 Reconstruction MRI Evaluation of Rotator with The Pie-Crusting 20-year Survival of the Toru Fukubayashi, MD, Japan Cuff Inflammation in Technique: A Five to Twelve Medial Oxford Baseball Pitchers Pre and Year Follow Up Study Unicompartmental Knee Paper #154 Post-competition Domenico Lup, MD, Italy Arthroplasty Prevalence and Variance of Angie Botto-van Bemden, PhD, USA Andrew Price, DPhil FRCS(Orth), Knee Injuries in Elite College Paper #167 United Kingdom American Football Players Paper #161 A New IDEEA Paper #173 Lee D. Kaplan, MD, USA Protective Balancing© for David A. Hayes, MBBS, FRACS, Prevention of Severe Muscle Australia A Computer Assisted Paper #155 Injuries and Anterior Surgical Technique for Total Psychometric Properties of a Cruciate Ligament Injuries in Paper #168 Knee Arthroplasty Revision Patient Satisfaction Score Elite Female Soccer Players Comparison of Robotic- Maurilio Marcacci, MD, Italy following Arthroscopic Knee Karsten Knobloch, MD, Germany Assisted and Manual Surgery Implantation of a Primary Tuesday, May 29, 2007 Karen K. Briggs, MPH, MBA, USA Paper #162 Total Knee Arthroplasty–A ROOM 102 Tennis-Specific Limitations Retrospective Study Paper #156 in Players with an ACL- Sang Eun Park, MD, PhD, Korea Paper #174 Return to Activity After Knee Deficient Knee All-Arthroscopic Modified Arthroscopy Javier Maquirriain, MD, PhD, Paper #169 Weaver Dunn Reconstruction James H. Lubowitz, MD, USA Argentina Early Pain Management of Chronic Acromioclavicular Following Total Knee Joint Dislocations Paper #157 Paper #163 Arthroplasty: Fascia Iliaca vs Martyn Snow, MRCS, Osteoarthritis of Limbs in Ankle Instability of Femoral Nerve Block United Kingdom Former Elite Athletes Professional Dancers – Tim J. McMeniman, BSc(Med) Michael Ilias Iosifidis, MD, Greece Functional Assessment MBBS, Australia Paper #175 Ewa Witek, Poland Arthroscopic Versus Mini- Open Rotator Cuff Repair: Outcome Analysis by Randomized Study Hideyuki Goto, MD, Japan

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 23 Scientific Papers

Paper #176 Paper #183 Paper #188 Paper #194 Strain and Force Changes Arthroscopic Management of Anatomic Double-Bundle The Implantation of within the Rotator Cuff after Traumatic Anterior Shoulder Anterior Cruciate Ligament Autologous Synovial Tissue- a Simulated Tear Using a Instability in Collision Reconstruction with derived Fibroblasts After Dynamic Model Athletes. Prospective Analysis Hamstring Autografts and TGF-beta Stimulation Sudhakar G. Madanagopal, MD, of 204 Cases with a 4-to-9 Bioabsorbable Interference Inhibits Mechanical and USA Year Follow-up and Results Screw Fixation: Prospective, Ultrastructural Deterioration Mario Victor Larrain, MD, Randomize Clinical Study of the ACL After the In Situ Paper #177 Argentina Compared to Single-Bundle Freeze-thaw Treatment Arthroscopic Biceps Technique with Similar Harukazu Tohyama, MD, PhD, Tenodesis: Biomechanical Paper #184 Fixation Japan Comparison of P.I.T.T. An Analysis of Capsular Area Timo Jaakko Jarvela, MD, PhD, Technique vs Suture Anchor in Patients with Anterior, Finland Paper #195 Fixation Posterior, and Anterior Cruciate Ligament Mark William Rodosky, MD, USA Multidirectional Shoulder Paper #189 Reconstruction in the Instability Anatomical Insertion of the Juvenile Athlete Paper #178 Christopher B. Dewing, USA Anteromedial and Peter T. Myers, MBBS, FRACS, Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Posterolateral Bundle of the Australia Repair with and without Paper #185 ACL and Operative Bursal Incorporation A Comparison of Open and Consequences for Double- Paper #196 Sergio Montenegro, MD, Chile Arthroscopic Techniques for bundle ACL Reconstruction The Effect of Graft Closure of the Rotator Rainer Siebold, MD, Germany Tensioning on Knee Joint Paper #179 Interval: Impact on Kinematics in Anatomic Arthroscopic Shoulder Glenohumeral Stability and Paper #190 2-bundle ACL Synovectomy in Patients Range of Motion Double-bundle ACL Reconstruction with Rheumatoid Arthritis Matthew Thomas Provencher, MD, Reconstruction: 4 versus Yuichi Hoshino, MD, Japan John W. Sperling, MD, USA USA 8-Stranded Hamstring Tendon Grafts Paper #197 Paper #180 Paper #186 Jin zhong Zhao, MD, China Anterior Cruciate Ligament Arthroscopic SLAP Repair in A Biomechanical Cyst or Spontaneous Overhead-throwing Athletes: Comparison of Repair Paper #191 Mucoïde Degeneration? Overuse versus Trauma Techniques in Posterior Type Risk Factor of Deep Vein David DeJour, MD, France Junji Ide, MD, PhD, Japan SLAP II lesions Thrombosis after Sanghak Lee, MD, Korea Arthroscopic ACL Paper #198 Paper #181 Reconstruction Image Intensifier Control- Clinical and Radiological Tuesday, May 29, 2007 Masayuki Inoue, MD, PhD, Japan assisted Anatomical Double Results 3 Years After ROOM 201 Bundle ACL Reconstruction Arthroscopic Treatment of Paper #192 Masayuki Inoue, MD, PhD, Japan Calcifying Tendonitis of the Paper #187 Significant Better Long-term Shoulder On the Effect of Different Results in Men Compared Paper #199 Olaf Lorbach, MD, Germany Tensioning Strategies on to Women Following ACL One and Two-Stage Revision Double Bundle Anterior Reconstruction Surgery in Infected Total Paper #182 Cruciate Ligament Inger Holm, Professor, Norway Knee Arthroplasty Description and Clinical Reconstruction Kinematics Michael Soudry, MD, Israel Consequences of the Pierluigi Cuomo, MD, Italy Paper #193 Posterosuperior Single versus Double Bundle Paper #200 Glenohumeral Ligament. An ACL Reconstruction In Vivo The Rationale For and Initial Unrecognised Part of the Kinematics Results of Computer Assisted Shoulder Capsule Pierluigi Cuomo, MD, Italy Minimally Invasive TKA Nicole Pouliart, MD, PhD, S. David Stulberg, MD, USA Belgium

24 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Paper #201 Paper #207 Wednesday, May 30, 2007 Paper #219 Functional Results of the Comparative Analysis for ROOM 101 Pronation External Rotation TKA with Non-resurfaced Radiographic Measurement Stress Test for the Patella According to of Component Position Paper #213 Calcaneofibular Ligament Articular Cartilage Between Conventional and Microfracture in the Insufficiency and Degeneration of the Patella Navigation Assisted Total Treatment of Articular Arthroscopy During the Test Hee-Soo Kyung, MD, Korea Knee Arthroplasty Cartilage Defects of the Satoru Ozeki, MD, PhD, Japan Ho-Rim Choi, MD, Korea Talus: Mid Term Clinical and Paper #202 MRI Results Paper #220 Post-operative Bleeding after Paper #208 Christoph Becher, MD, Germany Treatment of the Unstable Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Evaluation of Anatomical Ankle with an Osteochondral Prospective Study for the Reference for Sagittal Paper #214 Lesion: Results and Long- Use of Tranexamic Acid and Alignment in Total Knee The Treatment of Chronic Term Follow-up Drain Clamping Arthroplasty Lateral Ankle Instability Richard D. Ferkel, MD, USA Toshiro Otani, MD, PhD, Japan Hyuk Soo Han, MD, Korea with Arthroscopic Thermal Shrinkage Paper #221 Paper #203 Paper #209 Alberto Branca, MD, Italy Biomechanical and Clinical Randomised Controlled Trial Medial Release Techniques Characteristics Among to Compare the Functional in Total Knee Arthroplasty: Paper #215 Patients with Hip OA Outcome of Standard Outcome and Rationale Arthroscopic Ankle and Linda Maria Fernandes, MSc, NexGen LPS vs the High Flex Peter Verdonk, MD, Belgium Subtalar Arthrodeses: PhD-student, Norway NexGen LPS Total Knee 14-year Prospective Study Replacement Paper #210 and Follow Up Paper #222 Marietta van der Linden, PhD, Minimally Invasive Total James P. Tasto, MD, USA Localized Cartilage United Kingdom Knee Arthroplasty: Assessment with Three- Complications and Pitfalls Paper #216 dimensional dGEMRIC and Paper #204 Peter M. Bonutti, MD, USA Long-term Results of Quantitative MRI in Patients The Safety of Combined Extracorporeal Shockwave with Femoroacetabular Usage of Local Anaesthetic Paper #211 Treatment for Plantar Impingement Infiltration and Reinfusion Minimally-invasive Total Fasciitis David R. Wilson, DPhil, Canada Drains in Total Knee Knee Arthroplasty: Ching-Jen Wang, MD, Taiwan Arthroplasty Comparison between Mini- Paper #223 David Anthony Parker, FRACS, subvastus and Limited- Paper #217 Meniscus Allograft Australia parapatellar Approach Arthroscopic Treatment of Replacement for Lorenzo Sensi, MD, Italy the Anterior Impingement of Unicompartmental Paper #205 the Ankle: Classification and Osteoarthritis of the Knee A Comparing Study on Paper #212 Clinical Outcomes Nadim Aslam, FRCS Orth, Normal Incision TKR and The New Clinical Test for Sandro Giannini, MD, Italy United Kingdom MIS Quadriceps Muscle MIS QS Indicationand the Sparing Procedure Comparison Between MIS Paper #218 Paper #224 (MIS-QMS TKR) QS and Mini Incision High Energy Extracorporeal Hip Alpha Angles as Jiakuo Yu, MD, PhD, China Quadriceps Split TKA Shock Wave Therapy as a Radiographic Predictors of Sang Eun Park, MD, PhD, Korea Treatment for Chronic Chondral Injury and Paper #206 Insertional Achilles Decreased Hip Range-of- Accuracy of Rotational Tendinopathy Motion in Femoroacetabular Alignment of Femoral John P. Furia, MD, USA Impingement Component in Navigated Todd L Johnston, USA Total Knee Arthroplasty Mathieu Michaut, France

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 25 Scientific Papers

Paper #225 Paper #231 Paper #238 Wednesday, May 30, 2007 Factors Affecting Comparison of Functional Mechanical Shaving and ROOM 201 Postoperative Outcome of Testing to Isokinetic Testing: Temperature-controlled Arthroscopic Debridement Determination of Recovery Chondroplasty for Treatment Paper #243 for Hip Osteoarthritis after ACL Reconstruction of Deep Cartilage Defects The Effect of Sagittal Plane Yasuhiro Yamamoto, MD, PhD, Elizabeth A. Arendt, MD, USA Gunter Spahn, Dr. med., Germany Puddu Plate Position on Japan Tibial Slope. Can this be Paper #232 Paper #239 Used to an Advantage in the Paper #226 Does a Lateral Plasty The Reproducibility of Cruciate Ligament Deficient Radiographic Evidence of Increase Knee Stability Radiological Anterior and Knee? Acetabular Dysplasia as a During Single Bundle ACL Posterior Horn Positioning Josh Baumfeld, MD, USA Predictor of Hip Joint Reconstruction? in Preoperative Planning of Instability and Laxity Stefano Zaffagnini, MD, Italy Lateral Meniscus Paper #244 Mara Schenker, BS, USA Transplantations Factors Determining Paper #233 Romain Seil, MD, Luxembourg Effective Decompression of Paper #227 Intraligamental Rupture the Medial Tibio-femoral Arthroscopic Hip Labral of the Anterior Cruciate Paper #240 Joint Space in Valgus Repair: Assessment of Ligament (ACL) in Autologous Chondrocyte Opening-Wedge High Tibial Healing in an In Vivo Model Immature Athletes Implantation versus Matrix- Osteotomy–A Marc J. Philippon, MD, USA Nikolaus Alexander Streich, MD, induced Autologous Biomechanical Study Germany Chondrocyte Implantation Christiane Dorothea Wrann, DVM, Paper #228 for Osteochondral Defects Germany Arthroscopic Treatment of Paper #234 of the Knee Minimum 2 year the Painful ''Internal'' The Double Bundle follow-up results Paper #245 Snapping Hip: Results of Paradigm: Applications for Derek H. Park, MBChB, MRCS, Symptomatic Posterolateral Endoscopic Release and a Revision ACL United Kingdom Knee Instability After New Imaging Protocol Nicholas J. Honkamp, MD, USA Marginal Fracture of the James S. Keene, MD, USA Paper #241 Lateral Tibia Plateau Paper #235 Computational Site-Specific Miguel Angel Ayerza, MD, Wednesday, May 30, 2007 Accelerated Healing in Analysis of Cartilage Argentina ROOM 102 the Avascular Zone of Thickness in Loadbearing the Meniscus with and Non-loadbearing Paper #246 Paper #229 Radiofrequency Regions Using 3D MRI in Stability of Opening vs Outcome of Anterior James P. Tasto, MD, USA vivo Models of the Knee Closing Wedge High Tibial Cruciate Ligament Injuries in Sang Eun Park, MD, PhD, Korea Osteotomy Measured with an Elite Sporting Population. Paper #236 Rãntgen A Retrospective Review of Fresh Osteochondral Paper #242 Stereophotogrammetric Australian Rules Footballers Allograft Transplantation Long Term Results of Analysis in a Randomised Matthew G. Liptak, BMBS, for Cartilage Lesions of Arthroscopic Meniscectomy: Clinical Trial Australia the Knee About 30 Cases with 21 Joan Luites, MSc, Netherlands Simon Görtz, MD, USA Years of Follow-up Paper #230 Christophe Henri Hulet, MD, Paper #247 Anterior Cruciate Paper #237 France Bone Screws as a Fixation Reconstruction Using Implantation of Tissue- Device for Osteochondritis Allografts. Which Allograft is engineered Cartilage Made Dissecans Best? (A Comparative Study Ex-vivo for the Treatment Toru Nagatani, MD, Japan of the Mechanical/Material of Full-thickness Cartilage Properties of Different Defects of the Knee: Follow- Paper #248 Allografts) up Study with 10 Years Vascular Safety During High David Simon Penn, MBBS, Clinical Experience Tibial Osteotomy FRACS, Canada Nobuo Adachi, MD, PhD, Japan Robert Allaire, MD, USA

26 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Paper #249 Paper #255 Paper #262 Paper #267 Is Autologous Chondrocyte Meniscal Allograft Survivorship of Medial The Addition of Rotator Implantation (ACI) Literature Transplantation: Long-Term Unicompartmental Knee Interval Closure after Commercially Biased? A Clinical Results with Replacement During and Arthroscopic Repair of Either Systematic Review. Radiological and Magnetic Beyond the Second Decade Posterior or Shoulder James H. Lubowitz, MD, USA Resonance Imaging Robert Graham Steele, FRACS, Instability: Impact on Correlations Australia Glenohumeral Kinematics Paper #250 Peter Verdonk, MD, Belgium Timothy S. Mologne, MD, USA Outcomes of Microfracture Paper #263 for Isolated Chondral Defects Paper #256 Accuracy of the Bicondylar Paper #268 in the Knee Are Related to Tissue Engineering for Axis Measurement in Total A Comparison of Gait Lesion Location Meniscus Regeneration Knee Arthroplasty by Patterns in Patients David Noble, BA, United Kingdom in a Sheep Model Navigation. Correlation with Following Total and Elisaveta Kon, MD, Italy Preoperative CT Scan Unicompartmental Knee Paper #251 Measurement. Replacement Surgery Knee Chondral Lesions: Paper #257 Bertrand Galaud, MD, France Julian A. Feller, FRACS, Australia Incidence and Correlation Combined ACL Between Arthroscopic and Reconstruction and Oxford Paper #264 Paper #269 Magnetic Resonance Findings UKA for Osteoarhtritic Bupivacaína, Epinephrine Epidemiology and Natural Alex Vaisman, MD, Chile ACL Deficient Knee and Morphine as Analgesia History of Isolated Patello- Hemant Govind Pandit, FRCS After Total Knee femoral Arthritis Paper #252 (Orth), United Kingdom Replacement. A Double- David DeJour, MD, France Lateral Meniscus blind and Randomized Study. Reconstruction Using Paper #258 Luiz Fernando Machado Soares, Paper #270 Semitendinosus Tendon Introduction of the Oxford MD, Brazil Closing Wedge High Tibial Grafting knee: Lessons Learned from Osteotomy: Mid – Long Shuji Horibe, MD, Japan First 600 Patients Thursday, May 31, 2007 Term Follow Up Review Geoffrey F. Dervin, MD, Canada GENERAL SESSION ROOM of 352 Cases Paper #253 Peter T. Myers, MBBS FRACS, Meniscal Status After Paper #259 Paper #265 Australia Arthroscopic Repair: Healing Medullary Canal Diameter: Chronic Achilles Tendinosis: Rate by Zone, Remaining Does it Influence the Implant A Prospective Randomized Paper #271 Tear Length, Remaining Positioning in Total Knee Study Comparing the Ultrasound-guided Sclerosis Meniscus Dimensions. A Replacements Using Therapeutic Effect of an of Neovessels in Painful Prospective Study About Intramedullary Eccentric Training, the Chronic Patellar 53 Cases Alignment Guide? AirHeel Brace, and the Tendinopathy – A Nicolas Pujol, MD, France Suresh Thomas, MRCS, United Combination of Both Randomized Controlled Trial Kingdom Wolf Petersen, MD, Germany Aasne Fenne Hoksrud, Norway Paper #254 Clinical Symptoms, Paper #260 Paper #266 Paper #272 Function, and Activity Levels Effect of Valgus Bracing Failed Posterior Cruciate Promotion of Meniscus Correlate with Degree of on Muscle Function in Ligament Surgery–Etiology Repair by Injecting Tissue Loss Following Medial Knee OA Analysis Synovium-derived Meniscectomy Dan Kenneth Ramsey, PhD, USA Chih-Hwa Chen, MD, Taiwan Mesenchymal Stem Cells William G. Rodkey, DVM, USA Into the Joint Paper #261 Keisuke Mizuno, DVM, Japan Knee Arthrodesis After Failed Infected Knee Replacement Hans Michael Klinger, MD, Germany

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 27 congress award PROGRAMS

JOHN JOYCE AWARD RICHARD B. CASPARI AWARD Sponsored by Smith & Nephew, Inc., Endoscopy Division Sponsored by DePuy Mitek A cash prize will be awarded for the best arthroscopy paper The Richard B. Caspari Award was established in 2003 at the read during the scientific program in Florence. All arthroscopy 4th Biennial ISAKOS Congress in Auckland, New Zealand to papers submitted will automatically be considered for this reward the best upper extremity paper read at the scientific award. Second and third place prizes will also be granted. program of the Congress. A panel comprised of members of the ISAKOS Upper Extremity Committee will select two prize- winning papers in 2007. The winners will be announced in ACHILLES ORTHOPAEDIC SPORTS Florence, Italy at the awards ceremony and an honorarium MEDICINE RESEARCH AWARD will be awarded. Sponsored by Aircast, Inc. An honorarium will be awarded to a researcher who has PATELLOFEMORAL RESEARCH performed the most outstanding clinical or laboratory research in the field of orthopaedic sports medicine. EXCELLENCE AWARD Complete manuscripts must be mailed to the ISAKOS Sponsored by The Patellofemoral Foundation, Inc. office by November 1, 2006. Download an application and The Patellofemoral Research Excellence Award was review detailed instructions at www.isakos.com/awards. established in 2003 to encourage outstanding research Faxed and e-mailed submissions will not be considered. leading to improved understanding, prevention and treatment Deadline: November 1, 2006 of patellofemoral pain or instability. Complete manuscripts must be mailed to the ISAKOS Office no later than November 1, 2006. Download an application and review instructions at ALBERT TRILLAT YOUNG www.isakos.com/awards. The winner will be awarded an INVESTIGATOR’S AWARD honorarium at the 2007 Congress in Florence, Italy. An honorarium will be awarded to a young investigator Deadline: November 1, 2006 who has done outstanding clinical or laboratory research contributing to the understanding, care or prevention of injuries to the knee. All applicants must be under 40 years of age at the time of the 2007 Congress. Complete manuscripts must be mailed to the ISAKOS Office for consideration no later than November 1, 2006. Download an application and review detailed instructions at www.isakos.com/awards. Faxed and e-mailed submissions will not be considered. Deadline: November 1, 2006

ISAKOS MISSION STATEMENT ISAKOS promotes the worldwide exchange and dissemination of education and research in arthroscopy, knee surgery and orthopaedic sports medicine. ISAKOS seeks to be a resource to and link with regional and local societies that share similar goals, providing a larger arena where these national societies and continental organizations can combine their strengths in an international forum. 9

28 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 instructional COURSE LECTURES

Instructional Course Lectures (ICLs) will be held Monday through Thursday from 07:00 –08:30h. Participation in these courses is free.

MONDAY, MAY 28 ICL #1 ICL #5 Prevention of Sports Injuries Stress Fractures of the Foot Bones Roald Bahr, MD, PhD (Norway), Chair, Toru Fukubayashi, MD (Japan), Gideon Mann, MD (Israel), Chair, Per Renstrom, MD, PhD (Sweden), Timothy Hewett (USA), Bert Mandelbaum, MD (USA), Karim Khan (Canada), Ingrid Ekenman, MD, PhD (Sweden), Jan Ekstrand, MD, PhD (Sweden) Sakari Orava, MD, PhD (Finland), Ifrach Hetsroni, MD (Israel) At the completion of this course, the participant will At the completion of this course, the participant will have understand the principles for injury prevention; understand mastered the tools to verify the nature of Stress Fractures the risk factors and mechanisms for serious knee injuries; of the foot, their causes, course and treatment. The be familiar with training programs designed to prevent specific nature, unpredicted occurrence and rather serious knee injuries, with a particular focus on female obscure appearance in many ill defined cases would athletes. be appreciated. ICL #2 ICL #6 Medical and Surgical Treatment of the Partial-Thickness Rotator Cuff Tears: Controversies Early Arthritic Knee and Surgical Techniques Richard Parker, MD (USA), Chair, Robert Arciero, MD (USA), Seung-Ho Kim, MD (Korea), Chair, Kevin Plancher, MD, FACS, FAAOS Robert Dimeff, MD (USA) (USA), Guillermo Arce, MD (Argentina), Alessandro Castagna, MD (Italy) At the completion of this course, the participant will At the completion of this course, the participant will understand appropriate radiography; understand the role of understand pathogeneses and treatment options of medical alternatives; understand the role of nutriceuticals; various types of partial thickness rotator cuff injuries. and understand the role of surgical intervention. ICL #7 # ICL 3 The Biceps from Origin to Insertion Biomechanical Basis on Single-vs-Double Bundle ACLR William Kibler, MD (USA), Chair, Gary Poehling, MD (USA), Kazunori Yasuda, MD, PhD (Japan), Chair, Paolo Aglietti, MD (Italy), Gregory Bain, MBBS, FRACS (Australia) Masahiro Kurosaka, MD (Japan), Andrew Amis, DSc (United At the completion of this course, the participant will Kingdom), Savio Woo, PhD, DSc (USA) understand the function of the biceps in arm activities; At the completion of this course, the participant will be able to use clinical exam testing to discover biceps enlarge evidence-based biomechanical knowledge on ACLR injuries; and know when biceps tenotomy and tenodesis concerning arthroscopic anatomy, graft tensioning, in situ may be used. graft forces, and in vitro/vivo quantification of postoperative knee kinematics. ICL #4 Patellofemoral Instability: Biomechanics and Treatment Options Elizabeth Arendt, MD (USA), Chair, Julian Feller, FRACS (Australia), Pieter Erasmus, MBChB, MMed (South Africa) At the completion of this course, the participant will understand anatomy of the patellofemoral (PF) ligaments and their role in PF instability; understand biomechanical principles of the PF joint and how these principles are used in treatment of operative an non-operative approach to PF instability; understand relevant imaging of the PF joint in clinical management of PF disorders.

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 29 instructional COURSE LECTURES

TUESDAY, MAY 29 ICL #8 ICL #12 Clinical Biomechanics Failures of Surgery for Anterior Shoulder Instability: Giuliano Cerulli, MD (Italy), Chair Evaluation and Management Philippe Hardy, MD (France), Chair, Gilles Walch, MD (France), ICL #9 Anthony Miniaci, MD, FRCSC (USA), Mario Larrain, MD (Argentina), Management of Medial Collateral Ligament Injuries Alessandro Castagna, MD (Italy), Eiji Itoi, MD (Japan) Masahiro Kurosaka, MD (Japan), Chair, Savio Woo, PhD, DSc (USA), At the completion of this course, the participant will be Bent Jakobsen, MD (Denmark), Shinichi Yoshiya, MD (Japan) able to diagnose failure of open and arthroscopic shoulder At the completion of this course, the participant will be able stabilization including anterior and multidirectional to gain the knowledge of etiology, diagnosis and both non- instability. After the diagnosis of recurrence, the next step is surgical and surgical treatment of MCL injuries. Updated the etiological diagnostic. Etiologies are various and can be surgical approach will be discussed intensively. related to numerous factors such as local soft tissue quality, type of sport, recurrent trauma, poor or inappropriate initial ICL #10 surgery, false initial diagnosis etc. These steps are mandatory to guide the surgeons in treatment choice. On the Forefront: Current Concepts and Future Trends in Articular Cartilage Surgery ICL #13 Nicholas Sgaglione, MD (USA), Chair, Brian Cole, MD, MBA (USA), A Sport Specific Approach to Shoulder Function Alberto Gobbi, MD (Italy), Daniel Saris (Netherlands), and Injury Bert Mandelbaum, MD (USA) Klaus Bak, MD (Denmark), Chair, Stephan Burkhart, MD (USA), At the completion of this course, the participant will Seung-Ho Kim, MD (Korea), Ann Cools, PT (Belgium) understand the updated indications, presentation, work-up, approaches and surgical techniques to treating focal articular At the completion of this course, the participant will gain cartilage lesions in the knee. Current and novel methods newest knowledge on the biomechanical understanding of will be discussed including scaffolds, selective chondrocyte shoulder dysfunction with respect to the impact of changes expansion technologies and next-generation implantation in shoulder rotation, scapular kinesis, labral pathology and approaches. rotator interval injuries in sports. ICL #11 ICL #14 Anatomical Considerations and Arthroscopic Treatment of Wrist Injuries Techniques of the Ankle Luigi Pederzini, MD (Italy), Chair, Gregory Bain, MBBS, FRACS (Australia), Gary Poehling, MD (USA) Stephane Guillo, MD (France), Chair, Pau Golano, MD (Spain), James Stone, MD (USA), Masato Takao, MD, PhD (Japan) At the completion of this course, the participant will know how to technically perform a wrist arthroscopy; evaluate At the completion of this course, the participant will diagnostic and surgical possibilities of this technique; clinical understand the arthroscopic anatomy of the ankle; the cases representing different surgical options will also be arthroscopic treatment of ankle impingement and how to shown by the experts; advanced technique in treating recognize and treat the various different types of impingement degenerative and post-traumatic pathologies peculiarly problems; methods of treatment of ankle instability problems referred to tfcc will also be reviewed. using new anatomical techniques; and current concepts used in the treatment of cartilage problems of the ankle. www.isakos.com

30 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 WEDNESDAY, MAY 30

ICL #15 ICL #20 Criteria for Return to Sports Following Surgery: Clinical Decision Making in Shoulder Instability Using Rehabilitation Principles Evidence-Based Medicine Moises Cohen, MD, PhD (Brazil), Chair, K. Donald Shelbourne, MD (USA), Kurt Spindler, MD (USA), Chair, Warren Dunn, MD (USA), Gregory Fanelli, MD (USA), Pierre Chambat, MD (France), Bent Jakobsen, MD (Denmark) Anthony Miniaci, MD, FRCSC (USA), Niek van Dijk, PhD (Netherlands) This course will present a systematic review of the highest At the completion of this course, the participant will learn level of evidence manuscripts on treatment of shoulder about the updated criteria for return to sports following instability and will emphasize evidence based medicine surgical procedure in different situations: ACL reconstruction, concepts and applications of studies. meniscal repair, PCL reconstruction and Posterolateral instability, chondral lesions and patellofemoral problems, ICL #21 rotator cuff lesions, subacromial decompression and ankle Elbow Arthroscopy: From Basic to Advanced lesions in sports medicine. Gregory Bain, MBBS, FRACS (Australia), Chair, Luigi Pederzini, MD ICL #16 (Italy), Marc Safran, MD (USA), Gary Poehling, MD (USA) Emerging Technologies At the completion of this course, the participant will be able to understand the principles of elbow arthroscopy including Mitsuo Ochi, MD, PhD (Japan), Chair, Tron Krosshaug, MS (Norway), an understanding of the set up and safe performance of Johnny Huard, MD (USA), Ramon Cugat, MD (Spain) arthroscopy. They will understand the proximity of the major At the completion of this course, the participant will neurovascular structures. The participant will understand the understand several emerging technologies: biomechanical principles of arthroscopy in the assessment and management analysis of ACL injury mechanisms; muscle derived stem of instability, arthritis and contracture. cells for orthopaedics; PRGF; and cartilage repair. ICL #17 Treatment of Complex Meniscal Tears Konsei Shino, MD (Japan), Chair, David Caborn, MD (USA), Shuji Horibe, MD (Japan), Alberto Gobbi, MD (Italy), Rene Verdonk, MD, PhD (Belgium) At the completion of this course, the participant will be updated on the treatment of difficult cartilage injuries to the knee to prevent early degenerative arthritis. ICL #18 Approach to the Acutely Dislocated Knee Lars Engebretsen, MD, PhD (Norway), Chair, Niklaus Friederich, Prof. (Switzerland), Bruce Twaddle, FRACS (New Zealand), Greg Fanelli, MD (USA), Steinar Johansen, MD (Norway) At the completion of this course, the participant will have updated knowledge on the approach to a dislocated knee – primary treatment and evaluation, surgical options, rehabilitation and possible outcomes. # ICL 19 More than 1,300 abstracts Controversies in Soft Tissue ACL Reconstruction Chadwick Prodromos, MD (USA), Chair, Anastasios Georgoulis, MD were submitted for consideration in the (Greece), Kazunori Yasuda, MD, PhD (Japan) 2007 ISAKOS Congress. At the completion of this course, the participant will understand the advantages of allograft versus hamstring; cortical versus intra-tunnel fixation; double versus single 9 bundle; and anterior versus posterior hamstring harvest for ACLR.

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 31 instructional COURSE LECTURES

THURSDAY, MAY 31 ICL #22 ICL #26 Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy and Surgical Intraarticular Fractures: Fixation by Arthroscopy in Management for Tendinopathy Different Joints Nicola Maffulli, MD, MS, PhD, FRCS(Orth) (United Kingdom), M. Nedim Doral, MD (Turkey), Chair, Ramon Cugat, MD (Spain), Chair, John Furia, MD (USA), Jan Rompe, MD (Germany), Karl Benedetto, MD (Austria), Gregory Bain, MBBS, FRACS (Australia), Ludger Gerdesmeyer, MD (Germany), Frank Pettrone, MD (USA) Luigi Pederzini, MD (Italy), Jon Karlsson, MD, PhD (Sweden), At the completion of this course, the participant will know the Gary Poehling, MD (USA) biological bases of tendinopathy, and how to manage a variety At the completion of this course, the participant will have of tendon conditions using extracorporeal shockwave therapy. an improved comprehension of the conditions, indications, techniques, pitfalls and disadvantages/advantages of the ICL #23 intraarticular fractures treated under arthroscopic control Current Concepts of Posterolateral Knee Injury in different joints, such as shoulder, elbow, wrist, tibial plateau and ankle. Robert LaPrade, MD (USA), Chair, Lars Engebretsen, MD, PhD (Norway), Steinar Johansen, MD (Norway), Fred Wentorf, MS (USA) ICL #27 At the completion of this course, the participant will be Rehabilitation of Shoulder Injuries – Current Practice better able to evaluate the important anatomy, understand diagnostic techniques and utilize anatomic repairs and and Treatment Guidelines reconstruction techniques of the posterolateral knee. Benno Ejnisman, MD (Brazil), Chair, Eiji Itoi, MD (Japan), Philippe Hardy, MD (France), William Kibler, MD (USA) ICL #24 At the completion of this course, the participant will be Tissue Engineering of Cartilage for Clinical Defect able to understand the indication for surgical and non- Gary Poehling, MD (USA), Chair, Norimasa Nakamura, MD, PhD (Japan), surgical treatment for different shoulder injuries. Discussion Alberto Gobbi, MD (Italy), Mitsuo Ochi, MD, PhD (Japan), about biomechanics of disable throwing shoulder, guidelines Cristin Ferguson (USA), Constance Chu (USA) for first episode shoulder dislocation, frozen shoulder, multidirectional instability; results of ISAKOS At the completion of this course, the participant will online survey. understand the basic concepts of articular cartilage biology as they apply to the fundamental principles of leading ICL #28 edge tissue engineering approaches for articular cartilage regeneration. Current Concepts: Biomechanics, Evaluation and Management of A-C Joint Injuries ICL #25 Robert Arciero, MD (USA), Chair, Sergio Checchia (Brazil), MIS-TKA Alberto Pienovi, MD (Argentina) and Augustus Mazzocca, MD (USA) Michel Bonnin, MD (France), Chair, Paolo Aglietti, MD (Italy), At the completion of this course, the participant will Jean Noel Argenson (France), David Barrett, MD (United Kingdom), understand the important clinically relevant anatomy and Mark Pagnano (USA), Jan Victor, MD (Belgium) biomechanics of the acromioclavicular joint, coracoclavicular At the completion of this course, the participant will have ligament complex; learn recent advances in open and a detailed comprehension of the techniques – including arthroscopic stabilization techniques to treat symptomatic Navigation – and surgical approaches used in TKA with acromioclavicular joint dislocation focusing on anatomic MIS and a wide knowledge of published datas. reconstruction; appreciate, evaluate and treat complication of A-C joint injuries and treatment.

32 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 day tours Sunday, May 27, 2007 Wednesday, May 30, 2007 Guided Tour of Guided tour of Lucca and S. Gimignano (full day tour by bus) (full day tour by bus) Lucca is a city offering a range of Excursion by bus to Siena and pieces of art and characteristic views. S. Gimignano: Drive through the A walk on the ancient walls leads to Chianti region to the medieval town of the city centre and the main Siena (tour of the Cathedral, Town highlights, such as the Church of San Hall, Piazza del Campo). Lunch in a Frediano, the “Roman Amphitheatre”, typical restaurant, on the way back quick stop in S. Gimignano, the Guinigi tower, the Church of San a charming little town with narrow streets paved with red bricks Michele and finally the Cathedral of San Martino and the Tomb which has remained almost intact since the Middle Ages. of Ilaria del Carretto, Lucca’s most famous statue. After a lunch in a typical restaurant, the tour continues with the visit to one Price per person: ?75,00 of the ancient villas located on the surrounding hills. Minimum number: 35 pax Price per person: ?75,00 Monday, May 28, 2007 PM Minimum number: 30 pax Guided Tour of Florence Thursday, May 31, 2007 AM (half day walking tour) Michelangelo tour This tour begins with Santa Maria (half day walking tour) del Fiore (Duomo), the Cathedral of Florence, which was founded in 1296 by Visit to some of the most outstanding Arnolfo di Cambio. Beside the cathedral pieces of art of Michelangelo in stands Giotto’s famous “Bell Tower”, in Florence. Visit the Accademia Gallery front of the baptistery of San Giovanni. which hosts the original copy of Moving on to Orsanmichele, once the Michelangelo’s masterpiece, the granary of Florence until David, formerly standing in Piazza its transformation into a church, one enters Piazza della della Signoria. The tour continues Signoria,the political centre of the city. Finally, visit of the with the visit to the Prince’s Chapel monumental quarters of Palazzo Vecchio, today seat of Florence and Sagrestia Nuova of the San town hall. Originally built in 1299 by Arnolfo di Cambio, it was Lorenzo Basilica. Inside the subsequently enlarged and decorated to become the house of architectonical structure, you will admire one of the main the Medici family and seat of the City government. Its magnificent Michelangelesque sculptural cycles: from the mighty statues rooms were frescoed by Ghirlandaio, Bronzino and Vasari. of the Dukes to the lying enigmatic figures of Day and the Night, and Dawn and the Twilight which join the sense of Price per person: ?25,00 time and space and the mystery of man ages, which was Minimum number: 30 pax Michelangelo's torment. Tuesday, May 29, 2007 Price per person: ?40,00 H. Chianti, Smalltowns, Castles Minimum number: 30 pax and Wine Tasting (full day tour by bus) An exciting drive across the Tuscan countryside leads to rural landscapes, characteristic smalltowns and castles. To register for Day Tours visit The bus will make stops in the smalltowns of Greve, Castellina, Radda and will reach the www.oic.it/ISAKOS2007 castles of Meleto and Brolio where, after a visit of the castles and of the cellars, it will be possible to taste the wines produced and to purchase them. Departure to Florence in the late afternoon. Price per person: ?50,00 Minimum number: 35 pax

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 33 ifsp rehabilitation SYMPOSIUM

RE Tuesday, May 29, 2007 Many contributing factors have GISTER been proposed including lower ON 13:00 – 17:30 P extremity alignment, femoral AGE 37 This symposium sponsored by the International Federation notch size and shape, and of Sports Physiotherapy (IFSP) and ISAKOS will focus upon hormonal influences, however, several important and timely current issues. These three intervention must be aimed mini-symposiums together will provide the attendee with at modifiable, extrinsic factors. current knowledge and practical evidence-based management Conditioning, experience, and skill strategies that will enhance management of hip, knee, levels as well as muscle strength and recruitment, and tendon pathologies. although difficult to define and measure objectively, have all been studied as they relate to ACL injury in females. From 1989 13:00 Welcome & Introduction to 1999, the National Collegiate Athletic Association reported the 13:15–14:45 Current Concepts in the Management incidence of female to male ACL injury rates as 3.5 times greater of the Athletic Hip in basketball and 2.8 times greater in soccer. This alarming statistic has forced the scientific and rehabilitation communities J. Thomas Byrd, MD, Nashville, TN, USA to look at the jumping, cutting, and landing characteristics Michael Voight, PT, DHSc, SCS, OCS, ATC, Nashville, TN, USA associated with these sports as they relate to the typical Hip joint problems in the athlete can be extremely disabling. mechanism of injury. Neuromuscular training programs focusing Due to a lack of proven or reliable clinical assessment skills and on jumping and landing mechanics, agility drills to improve the use of rather invasive intervention methods, athletes have muscle reaction time, and plyometric training that reduces been resigned to living within the constraints of their symptoms. landing forces and improves lower extremity strength ratios The evolution of arthroscopy has led to an increased knowledge have shown favorable results in the literature, but no single study has been definitive or without flaw. regarding intra-articular sources of disabling hip symptoms that previously went unrecognized. This new knowledge has facilitated This mini-symposium will provide the clinician with a practical, the evolution of new and innovative surgical management evidence-based approach to the prevention of knee injuries. options. The increased number of available surgical options Specifically, this workshop will address the most current has necessitated the development of new rehabilitation programs understanding of knee biomechanics, pathophysiology of injury, based on the best available evidence from both basic and clinical diagnostic techniques, and rehabilitation concepts as they relate science in order to ensure optimal post-surgical results. to the prevention of knee injuries. In addition, clinicians will be able to identify flaws in jumping and landing characteristics, Based on the results of arthroscopy and rehabilitation, many assess conditions such as fatigue, muscle strength and athletic careers have been preserved and athletes allowed to recruitment, utilize all these concepts for successful skill resume full, painfree athletic participation. This mini-symposium training for the prevention of ACL injuries in athletes who will review current knowledge in the assessment and participate in multiple sports. management of hip joint problems in the athlete. In addition, 16:30–17:15 Current Concepts in Lower Limb guidelines for the management of the more common Tendinopathy pathologies seen in the athletic hip will be provided. Henning Langberg, PhD, Cand Scient., MSc, PT, SSPT, Copenhagen, Denmark 14:45 –15:00 Break Tendon injuries are a common occurrence in sports and account 15:00–16:30 Current Concepts in the Prevention for a substantial number of overuse injuries in sports participants. of ACL Injuries Although many begin as acute tendonitis, many progress to chronic tendinopathy. Rehabilitation of these injuries to tendons Mark DeCarlo, PT, MHA, SCS, ATC, Indianapolis, IN, USA can be both time consuming and frustrating for the athlete and Tim Hewitt, PhD, FACSM, Cincinnati, OH, USA clinician. The effective rehabilitation of these tendons requires Knee injuries are often the most debilitating and costly in sport, a full understanding of the scientific literature (or lack thereof) particularly knee ligament injuries. Anterior cruciate ligament and excellent clinical skills in the assessment and subsequent (ACL) injuries have steadily gained attention within the scientific exercise prescription. This current concepts course will allow community. Although all athletes are susceptible to ACL injury, the participants to understand the pathoetiology of common epidemiologic studies indicate that female athletes more likely tendinopathies in the lower extremity and will equip them with to sustain ACL injury than their male counterparts. the knowledge necessary to examine, diagnose and successfully manage these patients with the latest scientific and biomedical evidence available. 34 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 Pre-Registration

Attendees may pre-register using one of three ways: DEADLINES • Online at the ISAKOS website www.isakos.com • Mail the ISAKOS office March 1, 2007 Early Registration Deadline with Discount • Fax the ISAKOS office +1 925 807-1199 March 27, 2007 Hotel Reservation Deadline April 1, 2007 Refund Registration Deadline All pre-registered ISAKOS attendees will be emailed confirmations. April 1, 2007 Pre-Registration Deadline If you have not received a confirmation within three weeks of registering, please contact the ISAKOS office directly. May 26, 2007 On-site Registration Opens Confirm that the ISAKOS office has received your pre-registration May 26, 2007 Pre-Course and full payment before you arrive on-site. If the office does not May 27, 2007 Congress Opens have record of your registration, payment, or wire transfer on site at the meeting, you will be asked to pay again in order to receive Wire Transfers your badge. Please help us avoid this inconvenience to you. Attendees who wire transfer their registration fees must fax the ISAKOS office a copy of the transfer request, along with a copy of Online Registration: www.isakos.com the registration form, to ensure the funds are matched with the Attendees may register for the 2007 ISAKOS Congress online appropriate registration. using their credit card (VISA, MasterCard or American Express). Simply follow the instructions on our secure site to register. Cancellation Refunds will be subject to a US$75.00 processing fee. Requests Fax and Mail: for refunds must be received in writing in the society office by To pre-register for the ISAKOS Congress via mail or fax, please April 1, 2007. No refunds will be issued after April 1, 2007. complete the registration form using English block letters. Make Refunds will not be issued for any events or services included in sure to include all contact information (e-mail, mailing address, the congress that are not used at the discretion of the participant. telephone and fax) to ensure receipt of a Registration Confirmation Letter. All registrations must be accompanied by payment. We will ISAKOS Members not process any registration if payment is not received. Attendees who are ISAKOS members must be current on all Fax dues payments prior to registering for the congress. Members Attendees may fax their completed registration form will not be allowed to register for the 2007 Congress without to the ISAKOS office with their credit card information paying their membership dues. Any outstanding dues will be +1 925 807–1199. required to be paid on-site in Florence before admittance to Mail the congress is granted. Attendees may mail their completed registration form If attendees wish to become a member of ISAKOS in order to with credit card information or check (in US dollars register for the congress as a member, they must submit a drawn on a US bank ONLY) to the ISAKOS office: completed ISAKOS membership application to the ISAKOS ISAKOS office prior to registering for the ISAKOS Congress. Attendees 2678 Bishop Drive, Suite 250 may download an ISAKOS Membership Application from the San Ramon, CA 94583-2338 ISAKOS website www.isakos.com or contact the ISAKOS Office USA directly [email protected].

Payment On-site Registrations All registration fees will only be accepted in US funds. ISAKOS Attendees seeking to register for the Congress after April 1, 2007 accepts VISA, MasterCard and American Express. Checks will only must register on-site in Florence. Registration will be open on be accepted if they are in US dollars and drawn on a US bank. Saturday, May 26 from 14:00–17:00 in the in the Spandolini Checks not drawn on a US bank will be returned and registration Pavilion of the Fortezza da Basso. will not be processed. Attendees will be able to pay for their on-site registrations in US Dollars, by credit card (VISA, MasterCard or American The ISAKOS Office must receive all Express), or by check drawn in US Dollars on a US bank. pre-registrations by April 1, 2007. www.isakos.com

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 35 PRINTER: THIS PAGE PERFS!!!!! HOTEL INFORMATION

Hotel Accommodation Average prices (EURO ?, including breakfast and taxes) Deposit Double for per room Category Single single use Double (including handling fee )

5 stars ? 270,00 ? 350,00/ ? 380,00/ ? 470,00 e ? 400,00 ? 450,00 4 stars ? 170,00/ ? 210,00/ ? 230,00/ ? 300,00 ? ? ? c Superior 200,00 250,00 280,00 4 stars ? 110,00/ ? 160,00/ ? 180,00/ ? 240,00 Standard ? 150,00 ? 200,00 ? 220,00 3 stars ? 110,00/ ? 150,00/ ? 160,00/ ? 210,00 n Superior ? 150,00 ? 180,00 ? 190,00 3 stars ? 100,00/ ? 120,00/ ? 140,00/ ? 200,00

e Standard ? 140,00 ? 160,00 ? 180,00 2 stars/ ? 55,00/ ? 75,00/ ? 85,00/ ? 170,00 B&B ? 95,00 ? 135,00 ? 150,00 r Cancellation Policy Any changes or cancellation regarding registration fees and hotel o accommodation should be made in writing. In case of cancellation received: By November 27, 2006 l The paid amount will be refunded with a deduction of 30% for administrative charge. Between November 28, 2006 and March 27, 2007 The paid amount will be refunded with a deduction of 50% for administrative charge. F From March 28, 2007 No refund will be allowed for cancellations or no-shows. Booking fees will not be refunded. Refunds will be processed after the congress.

To make a hotel reservation please visit www.oic.it/ISAKOS2007

36 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 PRINTER: THIS PAGE PERFS!!!!!

Biennial th REGISTER ONLINE AT ISAKOS Congress www.isakos.com 6 MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY EARLY REGISTRATION DEADLINE: MARCH 1, 2007 REGISTRATION FORM

PERSONAL INFORMATION (PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY FOR BADGE PURPOSES) ID#: ______FAMILY (LAST) NAME SURNAME (FIRST) NAME REG ID# (PLEASE COPY FROM MAILING LABEL) ______(+ADDRESS ) (+ ) ______CITY STATE/PROVINCE POSTAL CODE COUNTRY ______TELEPHONE FAX E-MAIL ______NAME AS IT SHOULD APPEAR ON BADGE FIRST NAME LAST NAME DEGREE

REGISTRATION INFORMATION MASTERS PRE-COURSE: ADVANCES IN KNEE ARTHROPLASTY (PAGE 9) ISAKOS Member US$200.00 Non-Member US$250.00 IFSP REHABILITATION SYMPOSIUM (PAGE 34) ISAKOS Member /Non-Member US$75.00 Before After CONGRESS REGISTRATION March 1, 2007 March 1, 2007 ISAKOS Member US$600.00 US$700.00 Faculty US$675.00 US$775.00 Paper/Poster Presenter US$675.00 US$775.00 Non-Member US$850.00 US$950.00 Allied Health (requires copy of license or certification) US$400.00 US$500.00 Resident/Fellow (requires letter from Chief of Program) US$400.00 US$500.00 SOCIAL ACTIVITIES Spouse Program Quantity:______x US$40.00 PLEASE ENTER SPOUSE’S INFORMATION BELOW AS IT SHOULD APPEAR ON BADGE AND IN THE SPOUSE PROGRAM DIRECTORY: TOTAL ______FAMILY (LAST) NAME SURNAME (FIRST) NAME ______ADDRESS ______CITY STATE/PROVINCE POSTAL CODE COUNTRY (+______) TELEPHONE E-MAIL

METHOD OF PAYMENT (contact the ISAKOS Office for wire transfer information) MAIL THIS FORM AND PAYMENT TO: ISAKOS, 2678 Bishop Drive, Suite 250, San Ramon, CA 94583 USA OR FAX THIS FORM TO: +1 (925) 807–1199 Check (make check payable to ISAKOS in U.S. dollars drawn on US bank) Credit Card VISA MasterCard American Express

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By signing this form, attendees allow ISAKOS to charge their credit card for the total registration amount. Refunds will be subject to a US$75.00 processing fee. Requests for refunds must be received in writing in the society office by April 1, 2007. No refunds will be issued after April 1, 2007. PRINTER: THIS PAGE PERFS!!!!!

PUT STAMP HERE. POST OFFICE WILL NOT DELIVER MAIL WITHOUT POSTAGE.

ISAKOS 2678 Bishop Drive, Suite 250 San Ramon, CA 94583-2338 USA ISAKOS LEADERSHIP

Executive Committee Arthroscopy Committee Education Committee President Niek van Dijk, The Netherlands, Chair Don Johnson, Canada, Co-Chair John Bergfeld, USA Marc Safran, USA, Deputy Chair David McAllister, USA, Co-Chair 1st Vice President Gianluigi Canata, Italy Charles Brown, USA Paolo Aglietti, Italy Mark Clatworthy, New Zealand Ramon Cugat, Spain Patrick Djian, France Brian Donley, USA 2nd Vice President Bjorn Engstrom, Sweden Evan Ekman, USA Freddie Fu, USA Alberto Gobbi, Italy Joao Espregueira-Mendes, Portugal Secretary Roger Hackney, United Kingdom Andre Frank, France Moises Cohen, Brazil Bent Jakobsen, Denmark Anastasios Georgoulis, Greece Treasurer Miguel Khoury, Argentina Vicente Gutierrez, Chile John Bartlett, Australia Sung-Jae Kim, Korea Cristiano Laurino, Brazil Luigi Pederzini, Italy Maurilio Marcacci, Italy Past President Alberto Pienovi, Argentina Hideo Matsumoto, Japan Per Renström, Sweden Paulo Rockett, Brazil Thomas Muellner, Austria Assistant Secretary Romain Seil, Germany Kevin Plancher, USA Masahiro Kurosaka, Japan David Rajan, India Bylaws Committee Jaime Ulloa, Costa Rica Members-At-Large Paolo Aglietti, Italy, Chair W. Jaap Willems, Netherlands Stephen Burkhart, USA John Bartlett, Australia Torsten Wredmark, Sweden M Nedim Doral, Turkey Moises Cohen, Brazil Changlong Yu, China Lars Engebretsen, Norway Freddie Fu, USA Pieter Erasmus, South Africa Jon Karlsson, Sweden Education Resource Jon Karlsson, Sweden Development Task Force Seung-Ho Kim, Korea Communications Committee Marc Safran, USA, Chair Mario Larrain, Argentina Ronald Selby, USA, Chair Paolo Aglietti, Italy Hideshige Moriya, Japan Stephen Burkhart, USA, Deputy Chair Andreas Imhoff, Germany Fernando Radice, Chile Eric McCarty, USA, Deputy Chair Seung-Ho Kim, Korea Marc Safran, USA Ron Arbel, Israel Mitsuo Ochi, Japan Robert Smigielski, Poland Vladimir Bobic, United Kingdom Fernando Radice, Chile Kazunori Yasuda, Japan Moises Cohen, Brazil Ramon Cugat, Spain Finance Committee ISAKOS Office Walton Curl, USA John Bartlett, Australia, Chair Michele C. Johnson, Executive Director Magnus Forssblad, Sweden John Bergfeld, USA Gigi Tarasow, Meetings Manager Don Johnson, Canada Paolo Aglietti, Italy Rebecca Etherington-Smith, Seung-Ho Kim, Korea Freddie Fu, USA Meetings Registrar Burt Klos, Netherlands Moises Cohen, Brazil Katie Anderson, Meetings Registrar Kurt Spindler, USA Per Renström, Sweden Barry Tietjens, New Zealand Journal Advisory Task Force Walton Curl, USA, Chair Paolo Aglietti, Italy Dieter Kohn, Germany Alberto Pienovi, Argentina Boon-Keng Tay, Singapore Ned Amendola, USA

6TH BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS • MAY 27–31, 2007 • FLORENCE, ITALY | 39 ISAKOS LEADERSHIP

Knee Committee Orthopaedic Sports Site Selection Committee Philippe Neyret, France, Chair Medicine Committee Per Renström, Sweden, Chair Rene Verdonk, Belgium, Deputy Chair Peter Myers, Australia, Chair Paolo Aglietti, Italy Allen Anderson, USA Richard Parker, USA, Deputy Chair John Bergfeld, USA Jack Andrish, USA Jose Mario Beca, Portugal Peter Fowler, Canada Peter Bonutti, USA Gian Luigi Canata, Italy Freddie Fu, USA Jesus Cardona – Munoz, Mexico Myles Coolican, Australia Roland Jakob, Switzerland Pascal Christel, France Rogerio Da Silva, Brazil Gary Poehling, USA William Clancy, USA Toru Fukubayashi, Japan Barry Tietjens, New Zealand Matteo Denti, Italy Per Hölmich, Denmark Pieter Erasmus, South Africa Jose Huylebroek, Belgium Strategic Planning Committee Markku Jarvinen, Finland Julian Feller, Australia Gary Poehling, USA, Chair Dimitr Alexander Jontschew, Germany Stephen Howell, USA Ken DeHaven, USA, Deputy Chair Francois Kelberine, France Ned Amendola, USA Dieter Kohn, Germany Hiralal Nag, India Masahiro Kurosaka, Japan Peter Bonutti, USA Halit Pinar, Turkey Stephen Burkhart, USA Abbas Madani, Iran Fernando Radice, Chile Kai-Ming Chan, China Mitsuo Ochi, Japan Dean Taylor, USA Hans Paessler, Germany Bruce Twaddle, New Zealand Walton Curl, USA David Parker, Australia Lars Engebretsen, Norway Eduardo Zamudio, Chile Program Committee Peter Fowler, Canada Lars Engebretsen, Norway, Chair Bill Grana, USA Kazunori Yasuda, Japan, Deputy Chair Roland Jakob, Switzerland Membership Committee Ron Arbel, Israel Luis Vargas, USA, Chair Mitsuo Ochi, Japan John Bartlett, Australia Alberto Pienovi, Argentina Rene Abdalla, Brazil, Deputy Chair M. Nedim Doral, Turkey M Nedim Doral, Turkey, Deputy Chair Anastasios Georgoulis, Greece Kandiah Raveendran, Malaysia Gabriel Agar, Israel Philippe Hardy, France Per Renström, Sweden Allen Anderson, USA Chris Harner, USA Konsei Shino, Japan Mario Berenstein, Argentina Don Johnson, Canada Neil Thomas, United Kingdom Giuliano Cerulli, Italy Robert Johnson, USA Barry Tietjens, New Zealand Paul Chang, Singapore William Kibler, USA Rene Verdonk, Belgium Kyosuke Fujikawa, Japan Seung-Ho Kim, Korea Eduardo Zamudio, Chile Vicente Gutierrez, Chile Peter Myers, Australia Christopher Kaeding, USA Philippe Neyret, France Upper Extremity Committee Nilesh Shah, India Richard Parker, USA William Kibler, USA, Chair Robert Smigielski, Poland Ronald Selby, USA Benno Ejnisman, Brazil, Deputy Chair Charlotte Willberg, Sweden Niek van Dijk, The Netherlands Guillermo Arce, Argentina Savio Woo, USA Greg Bain, Australia Eduardo Zamudio, Chile Newsletter Editorial Board Klaus Bak, Denmark Ronald Selby, USA, Editor Scientific Committee Alessandro Castagna, Italy Vladimir Bobic, United Kingdom Robert Johnson USA Chair Chih Hwa Chen, Taiwan M. Nedim Doral, Turkey Jon Karlsson Sweden Deputy Chair Mark Ferguson, South Africa Peter Fowler, Canada Andrew Amis United Kingdom Philippe Hardy, France Alberto Gobbi, Italy Bruce Beynnon USA Seung-Ho Kim, Korea Seung-Ho Kim, Korea Lars Engebretsen Norway Philippe Landreau, France Tomihisa Koshino, Japan Johnny Huard USA Mario Larrain, Argentina James Lubowitz, USA Gideon Mann Israel Robert Marx, USA Robert Marx USA Anthony Miniaci, Canada David Rajan, India Norimasa Nakamura Japan Kevin Plancher, USA Paulo Rockett, Brazil William Rodkey USA Gary Poehling, USA Robert Smigielski, Poland Kurt Spindler USA Savio Woo USA Kazunori Yasuda Japan 40 | QUESTIONS? CALL THE ISAKOS OFFICE +1 (925) 807–1197 CONGRESSSPONSORS

ISAKOS thanks the following companies for their generous donations to the ISAKOS Congress. Their sponsorships have made the congress more affordable and accessible to our attendees. It would be impossible to have an international congress without their support. ISAKOS Mission PLATINUM SPONSOR Statement

Smith & Nephew Endoscopy, a subsidiary of Smith & Nephew plc, is a world leader in the development and commercialization of ISAKOS advances endoscopic techniques. The growth of the company mirrors the recognition of Endoscopy– the worldwide minimally invasive surgery–as a primary surgical choice among physicians and patients. exchange and Building on its core values–performance, innovation and trust – Smith & Nephew Endoscopy has become the global leader in arthroscopy. Leveraging this expertise, Smith & Nephew has dissemination of developed technologically advanced devices and procedures for other minimally invasive surgical treatments, including those for varicose veins and lower back pain. education, research and patient care SILVER SPONSORS in arthroscopy, Arthrex

Arthrotek/Biomet knee surgery ConMed Linvatec and orthopaedic DePuy Mitek sports medicine. International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine 2678 Bishop Drive, Suite 250 San Ramon, CA 94583 USA Telephone: (925) 807–1197 Fax: (925) 807–1199 [email protected] www.isakos.com

BIENNIAL ISAKOS CONGRESS th jofilnoreunces 6 italy MAY 27–31, 2007

HTS HLIG s HIG ation SS onstr lasty GRE Dem throp ON gical ps ee Ar C Sur ksho n Kn Live Wor ces i • s-On dvan uries Hand on A ion s Inj • urse Sess Sport re-Co ians n of • P hysic itatio am P habil • Te on Re urse • Co Register online at www.isakos.com before April 1, 2007