François Molinier
University of Toulouse
30 Papers
68 Citations
François Molinier is an academic researcher from University of Toulouse. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Arthroscopy. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 27 publications.
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Papers
Arthroscopic treatment of chronic ankle instability: Prospective study of outcomes in 286 patients.
Ronny Lopes,Michael Andrieu,Guillaume Cordier,François Molinier,Jonathan Benoist,Fabrice Colin,André Thès,Marc Elkaïm,Olivier Boniface,Stéphane Guillo,Thomas W. Bauer +10 more
TL;DR: Arthroscopic ankle stabilisation repair and reconstruction techniques hold considerable promise but require further evaluation to better determine the indications of repair versus reconstruction and to obtain information on long-term outcomes.
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Diagnosis and treatment of tibiofibular syndesmosis lesions.
TL;DR: The present anatomic, epidemiological, diagnostic and therapeutic review does not preclude further clinical studies of rotational ankle instability with its strong risk of osteoarthritis.
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Surgery for femoroacetabular impingement using a minimally invasive anterolateral approach: analysis of 118 cases at 2.2-year follow-up.
Philippe Chiron,A. Espié,Nicolas Reina,Etienne Cavaignac,François Molinier,Jean-Michel Laffosse +5 more
TL;DR: Surgical treatment of FAI with a minimally invasive, anterolateral approach does not require any specific materials and yields a reliable surgical procedure without major complications.
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Arthroscopic classification of chronic anterior talo-fibular ligament lesions in chronic ankle instability.
André Thès,Haruki Odagiri,Marc Elkaïm,Ronny Lopes,Michael Andrieu,Guillaume Cordier,François Molinier,Jonathan Benoist,Fabrice Colin,Olivier Boniface,Stéphane Guillo,Thomas W. Bauer +11 more
TL;DR: This arthroscopic classification of chronic ATFL lesions confirms the diagnostic role forArthroscopy in assessing the ligaments in patients with CAI and is helpful for determining the best surgical technique for stabilising the ankle.
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The anconeus, an active lateral ligament of the elbow: new anatomical arguments
TL;DR: The new anatomical characteristics of the anconeus revealed in this study make this muscle a digastric head of triceps brachii that coapts the ulna to the humerus and so reduces varus instability.
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