ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY The Orthopaedic Surgery division consists of three services: The Pediatric-Orthopaedic service, the Sports Medicine service (Elite Sports Medicine), and the Center for Motion Analysis (CMA). Our team is made up of exceptional surgeons and physicians, PAs, APRNs, sports trainers and engineers with many years of extensive training and experience to provide our patients with quality care. We provide the full spectrum of care for children and young adults with orthopaedic conditions such as scoliosis and spinal deformities, limb deformity, congenital dislocated hips, clubfeet, congenital hand deformities, nerve injuries, children’s fractures, as well as neuromuscular conditions such as cerebral palsy, spina bifida, and muscle diseases. Our Sports Medicine division provides expert care for injured athletes as well as injury prevention programs. The Orthopaedic Surgery department has six fellowshiptrained surgeons: division chief Jeffrey Thomson, MD, Mark Lee, MD, Phil Mack, MD, Kristan Pierz, MD, Janet Zahradnik, MD, and Sonia Chaudhry, MD. We also hired two new surgeons: Mark Rieger, MD, and Anna Katsman, MD, who work in our new Danbury office. Our Orthopaedic surgeons work closely with UConn Health and Maimonides Medical Center Orthopaedic residents who receive clinical and surgical experience. Our ACGME-accredited pediatric orthopaedic fellowship continues to train the upcoming generation of pediatric orthopaedic surgeons. Our advanced practice providers, Amy Shannon, APRN, Marta Berube, PA-C, Kevin Connolly, PA-C, and Sarah Florence, PA-C, were joined this year by Erin Malone, PA-C, and Kimberly VanPelt, PA-C. The office staff and providers have worked hard to offer same-day and walk-in appointments for the timely evaluation of orthopaedic injuries. Among other highlights for the year, the Orthopaedic Surgery division is now on the fourth floor of the Bone & Joint Institute, which features the EOS® X-ray Image System providing high quality, extremely detailed images at a significantly lower radiation dose compared to a typical radiographic X-ray. Dr. Chaudhry completed the prestigious
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ANNUAL ACADEMIC REPORT 2020
ASSH/AFSH (American Society for Surgery of the Hand/American Foundation for Surgery of the Hand) International Hand Fellowship at Ganga Hospital, Coimbatore, India, in April 2019, advancing our experience with complex nerve injuries such as those of the brachial plexus.
PUBLICATIONS
The Sports Medicine Service (Elite Sports Medicine) includes clinical director Lee Pace, MD, and Allison Crepeau, MD, and non-operative physician Imran Hafeez, MD. Three physician assistants, A.J. Ricciuti, PA, Kevin Fitzsimmons, PA, and Katelyn Colosi, PA, complement the team. The service provides sports medicine coverage for several high schools as well as Trinity College and Quinnipiac University sports teams. In addition, the sports medicine department continues its expertise in concussion treatment, with centers of care extending as far as the HeadZone in Fairfield, CT. Dr. Pace continues his work on trochlear dysplasia – a congenital malformation of the knee joint that affects the kneecap, and he is one of only a handful of surgeons worldwide to offer arthroscopic trochleoplasty.
Pogemiller K, Garibay E, Pierz K, Acsadi G, Õunpuu S. Comparison of gait patterns and functional measures between Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type I and II in children to young adults. Gait Posture. 2020 Mar;77: 236-242. doi:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2020.01.027.Epub 2020 Feb 1.
The Center for Motion Analysis, directed by Dr. Pierz and Sylvia Õunpuu, MSc, is fully certified by the Commission for Motion Laboratory Accreditation. The CMA provides a wide range of diagnostic services evaluating children with disorders that affect walking and that may require treatment including orthopaedic surgical intervention. The Center for Motion Analysis also conducts research on disorders that impact gait such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, cerebral palsy, and clubfoot, as well as sports injuries. The center is currently a member of the PRISM research interest group for motion analysis, which is focused on development of a motion-analysis-based protocol for use in sports medicine. Our CMA is one of 14 institutions represented in this collaboration, and we are building an SOP with four of the other key institutions. In other achievements, in 2020, Sylvia Õunpuu provided keynote lectures at the annual Comprehensive Clinical Gait Course in Shanghai, China. Our research efforts are led by Erin Garibay, BS.
Pierz K, Lloyd J, Solomito M, Mack P, Õunpuu S. Lower extremity characteristics in recurrent clubfoot: clinical and gait analysis findings that may influence decisions for additional surgery. Gait Posture. 2020 Jan;75:85-92. Epub 2019 Oct 4.
Õunpuu S, Pierz KA, Acsadi G, Wren TAL. Changes in walking velocity and stride parameters with age in children with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. Neuromusc Disord. 2020 Oct; 30(10):825-832. doi:10.1016/j. nmd.20020.08.359. Epub 2020 Aug 21. Pierz KA. CORR Insights®: Is social deprivation associated with PROMIS outcomes after upper extremity fractures in children? Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2020 Dec 30; 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001620. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001620. PMID: 33394762. Wren TAL, Tucker CA, Rethlefsen SA, Gorton GE III, Õunpuu S. Clinical efficacy of instrumented gait analysis: systematic review 2020. Gait Posture. 2020 Jul; 80:274279. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2020.05.031. Ounpuu S, Pierz KA, Acsadi G, Wren TAL. Changes in walking velocity and stride parameters with age in children with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. Neuromusc Disord. 2020 Oct;30(10):825-832. doi:10.1016/j. nmd.20020.08.359. Epub 2020 Aug 21. Su A, Lee MC. The cost and educational experience of treating supracondylar humerus fractures: a pilot analysis on standardizing surgical care. J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev. 2020 Jun;4(6):e20. PMID: 32656475.