Brandon J. Erickson
Hospital for Special Surgery
16 Papers
23 Citations
Brandon J. Erickson is an academic researcher from Hospital for Special Surgery. The author has contributed to research in topics: Elbow & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 16 publications. Previous affiliations of Brandon J. Erickson include University of York & University of Arizona.
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Papers
Chronic lateral epicondylitis: challenges and solutions.
TL;DR: The data demonstrate that NSAIDs, PT, bracing, and shockwave therapy provide limited benefit for treating LE, and biologics such as platelet-rich plasma and autologous whole-blood injections may be superior to steroid injections in the long-term management of LE.
Adhesive Capsulitis: Demographics and Predictive Factors for Success Following Steroid Injections and Surgical Intervention
TL;DR: In shoulder adhesive capsulitis, women and patients with Diabetes are more commonly affected, patients with diabetes respond less favorably to physical therapy in isolation and physical therapy plus corticosteroid injections than nondiabetic patients, and Patients with diabetes and nondi diabetic patients have functional improvement after capsular release and manipulation if conservative treatment for adhesive Capsulitis fails.
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The biomechanics of subscapularis repair in reverse shoulder arthroplasty: The effect of lateralization and insertion site.
Jonathan-James T. Eno,Andreas Kontaxis,Alejandro Novoa-Boldo,Eric Windsor,Xiang Chen,Brandon J. Erickson,Russell F. Warren,David M. Dines,Joshua S. Dines,Lawrence V. Gulotta,Samuel A. Taylor +10 more
TL;DR: Investigating how glenosphere lateralization and different re‐insertion sites can affect the biomechanics of the SSc after RSA found a superior SSc repair site may help reduce the adductive SSc moment arm and allow for reduced tension on the repair as its length in that location is less than that of the native SSc.
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Indications, Techniques, Outcomes for Matrix-Induced Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation (MACI)
TL;DR: Matrix-induced autologous chondrocyte implantation (MACI) is a third generation autologueous chONDrocytes are expanded in culture and seeded onto a collagen scaffold, thus simplifying the technique and addressing some of the issues seen with the first and second generation autologus chondrosclerosis implantation.
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Reasons for Retirement Following Ulnar Collateral Ligament Reconstruction Among Major League Baseball Pitchers
Brandon J. Erickson,Junyoung Ahn,Peter N. Chalmers,Christopher S. Ahmad,Bernard R. Bach,Nikhil N. Verma,Anthony A. Romeo +6 more
TL;DR: MLB pitchers who have undergone UCLR are no more likely to retire from shoulder or elbow injuries than are those who have not undergone UCR, and MLB career length was similar between pitchers with and without a history of UCR.
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