Developing Orthopaedics
Last updated Thursday, January 06, 2005
Ernest U. (Chappie) Conrad III, M.D. Cortisone-induced avascular necrosis in an experimental model - (John M. Clark, Jr., M.D., Ph.D.) Harborview Medical Center James D. Bruckner, M.D. and Joel Hoekema, M.D. The UW Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine Logo Together we can develop Orthopaedics The University of Washington Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine program is recognized as the best in the Western United States.Recipe for success Our success is due to an outstanding faculty who are world renown
for their expertise in evaluation and management of patients with bone
and joint problems and to the first class medical facilities offered by
the University of Washington Medical Center, Harborview Medical Center,
Children's Hospital and Regional Medical Center, the Sports Medicine
Clinic, and the Veterans' Medical Center. A third and most important
ingredient in our recipe for success are the research programs that
enable our faculty to remain on the cutting edge of knowledge and
treatment.
These research programs are made possible in large part by donations
and gifts that permanently establish endowed chair programs in areas of
importance to our patients. The interest from these chairs is directed
exclusively at the targeted area, be it trauma, spine surgery or
shoulder and elbow. Without these endowments, research in Orthopaedics
and Sports Medicine would be slowed to a crawl. With them, strong
programs arise which then, in turn, help bring in additional resources
from industry and from federal granting agencies such as the NIH. Endowments and Research The Ernest M. Burgess Jr. Endowed Chair for Orthopaedic Research
has made possible investigations in osteoporosis, the most common bone
disease affecting most women over the age of 60. One of the many
developments has been a new method for the early detection of this
condition.
The Sigvard T. Hansen Jr. Endowed Chair for Traumatology Research has enabled many research projects regarding better methods for managing fractures, especially in the severely injured patient.
The Jerome H. Debs II Endowed Chair supports the investigation of injured extremities, particularly the foot and ankle.
The Surgical Dynamics Endowed Chair for Spine Research supports cutting edge spine research, especially regarding new methods for repairing spines damaged by injury or degeneration.
The Douglas T. Harryman II/DePuy Endowed Chair supports the
study of new methods for managing shoulder and elbow problems, such as
arthritis, rotator cuff tears and dislocations. Opportunities for the future We have some new and exciting opportunities for developing
orthopaedics. We are half way toward the creation of the first ever
Endowed Chair for Women's Sports Medicine and Fitness.
We have launched a campaign to outfit the new Orthopaedic Science
Laboratories at the Harborview Research and Training Building. We are
underway with a campaign to support University of Washington Sports
Medicine as it moves into its new home in the Hec Edmundson Pavilion.
We are also initiating endowment programs to support research in
bone and soft tissue tumors, hand and microvascular surgery, pelvic and
hip surgery, arthritis, and pediatric orthopaedics. How can I be a part of Developing Orthopaedics? How can I be a part of Developing Orthopaedics?
You already are. Just by reading this brochure and becoming informed,
you are playing a role in the ongoing development of Orthopaedics at
the University of Washington.
If you have a particular interest in learning more about any of the
programs mentioned above or in starting something completely new,
please let us know. We'd love to hear your ideas.
Please write us at:
Dept of Orthopaedics, Box 356500
University of Washington
Seattle, WA 98195-6500
Email: orthoedu@u.washington.edu
Web: http://www.orthop.washington.eduThe Story of the UW Orthopaedics Logo The term "Orthopaedics" was coined by French physician Nicolas Andre
in 1741, from Latin words meaning "straight child." The emblem of
orthopaedics has historically been that of a crooked tree being
straightened by making it grow next to a straight splint, implying
that, with proper care and guidance, crooked bones could be made
straight.
In the early 1980s, hand surgeon Alan Bach created a logo for the
University of Washington Department of Orthopaedics that shows a
Douglas fir next to Seattle's own version of the straight splint: the
Space Needle.
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