Brian T. Barlow
Hospital for Special Surgery
21 Papers
64 Citations
Brian T. Barlow is an academic researcher from Hospital for Special Surgery. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Sports medicine. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 18 publications. Previous affiliations of Brian T. Barlow include Cornell University.
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Papers
Does Degenerative Lumbar Spine Disease Influence Femoroacetabular Flexion in Patients Undergoing Total Hip Arthroplasty
Christina Esposito,Theodore T. Miller,Han Jo Kim,Brian T. Barlow,Timothy M. Wright,Douglas E. Padgett,Seth A. Jerabek,David J. Mayman +7 more
TL;DR: Most patients undergoing THA sit in a similar range of pelvic tilt, with a small mean difference in pelvic tilt between patients with DDD spines and those without radiographic arthrosis.
What Are Normal Metal Ion Levels After Total Hip Arthroplasty? A Serologic Analysis of Four Bearing Surfaces
Brian T. Barlow,Philippe A. Ortiz,John Boles,Yuo-yu Lee,Douglas E. Padgett,Geoffrey H. Westrich +5 more
TL;DR: No serum metal ion level differences were found among well-functioning total hip arthroplasty with modern bearing couples and metal ion levels did not correlate with patient-reported outcome measures.
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Using a non-invasive secure skin closure following total knee arthroplasty leads to fewer wound complications and no patient home care visits compared to surgical staples.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated a non-invasive, removable skin closure system for knee arthroplasty (TKA) to determine its effect on wound complications and found that wound complications were significantly lower in the Zip closure group (p = 0.045).
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Short-Term Outcomes and Complications After Rejuvenate Modular Total Hip Arthroplasty Revision
TL;DR: Patients undergoing revision of Rejuvenate modular neck THA implants should be counseled on modest functional improvements and relative frequency of complications, but overall worsening in the SF-12 mental component scores.
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Short-Term Metal Ion Trends Following Removal of Recalled Modular Neck Femoral Stems.
TL;DR: Blood tests prior to revision and postoperatively at 6weeks, 3months, 6months, and 1year measured serum cobalt and chromium concentrations, ESR, and CRP so surgeons can set realistic expectations for serum metal ion levels following Rejuvenate stem revision.
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