Thomas Hoffelner
Paracelsus Private Medical University of Salzburg
29 Papers
86 Citations
Thomas Hoffelner is an academic researcher from Paracelsus Private Medical University of Salzburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Anterior cruciate ligament. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 24 publications. Previous affiliations of Thomas Hoffelner include University of Salzburg.
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Papers
Femoral and Tibial Graft Tunnel Parameters After Transtibial, Anteromedial Portal, and Outside-In Single-Bundle Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
TL;DR: The AMP and OI surgical techniques were superior in positioning the ACL femoral tunnel at the center of the native ACL attachment site compared with the TT technique.
73
Effect of anatomic bone grafting in post-traumatic recurrent anterior shoulder instability on glenoid morphology
Philipp Moroder,Wolfgang Hitzl,Mark Tauber,Mark Tauber,Thomas Hoffelner,Herbert Resch,Alexander Auffarth +6 more
TL;DR: Anatomic glenoid reconstruction surgery using the J-bone graft provides temporary overcorrection of the glenoids concavity extent, depth, and version, with subsequent normalization due to physiologic remodeling processes.
45
Clinical and computed tomography–radiologic outcome after bony glenoid augmentation in recurrent anterior shoulder instability without significant glenoid bone loss
Philipp Moroder,Martina Blocher,Alexander Auffarth,Thomas Hoffelner,Wolfgang Hitzl,Mark Tauber,Mark Tauber,Herbert Resch +7 more
TL;DR: Because of anatomic bony remodeling processes, glenoid augmentation surgery seems to be subject to extensive graft osteolysis and, consequently, unsatisfactory clinical outcome in terms of stability in some cases.
44
Reliability of a new standardized measurement technique for reverse Hill-Sachs lesions in posterior shoulder dislocations.
Philipp Moroder,Mark Tauber,Thomas Hoffelner,Alexander Auffarth,Gundobert Korn,Robert Bogner,Wolfgang Hitzl,Herbert Resch +7 more
TL;DR: The mere estimation of the size of reverse Hill-Sachs lesions showed poor reliability, raising the concern for potential overestimation or underestimation in clinical practice.
38
Anterior shoulder dislocation and concomitant fracture of the greater tuberosity: Clinical and radiological results.
Florian Dussing,Fabian Plachel,Fabian Plachel,Teresa Grossauer,Thomas Hoffelner,Eva Schulz,Arvind von Keudell,Alexander Auffarth,Philipp Moroder,Philipp Moroder +9 more
- 12 Mar 2018
TL;DR: A concomitant isolated fracture of the greater tuberosity leads to low recurrence rates along with a significant decrease in range of motion after primary traumatic anterior shoulder dislocation.