Welcome to the ASES 2023 Specialty Day Meeting!
We hope that you will enjoy the convenience of having access to the ASES 2023 Specialty Day program materials in electronic format. Below, you will find access to 15 paper abstracts to use for further study and as a reference upon your return home. How-To videos will be available after Specialty Day.
Access to this site will remain active until Friday, April 14, 2023.
Abstracts, How-To Videos & Presentation Handouts
Moderator: Jed Kuhn, MD
Panel: Bob Tashjian, MD, Leesa Galatz, MD, Alex Aleem, MD, Marc Kowalsky, MD, Felix “Buddy” Savoie, MD
Dane Salazar, MD
Moderators: Jason Hsu, MD, Asheesh Bedi, MD
- Paper 1 – Failed Rotator Cuff Surgery That Led to Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: Can We Predict Who Will Fail?
- Paper 2 – The Effects of Estrogen and Testosterone Supplementation after Rotator Cuff Repair In a Murine Model
- Paper 3 – Timing of Surgical Repair for Traumatic Rotator Cuff Tears
- Paper 4 – Reaching MCID for ASES, SANE, and SST following Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Repair Does Not Correlate with Patient Satisfaction at 2 year minimum follow-up
- Paper 5 – Identifying Psychological Barriers to Recovery Following Rotator Cuff Repair
Moderator: Jonathan Levy, MD
Panel: Larry Gulotta, MD, Sara Edwards, MD, Evan Flatow, MD, Andrew Jawa, MD, Surena Namdari, MD
Moderators: Joaquin Sanchez-Sotelo, MD, Eric Ricchetti, MD
- Paper 6 – Augmented Baseplates Yield Optimum Outcomes When Compared to Bone Graft Augmentation for Managing Glenoid Deformity During Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: A Retrospective Comparative Study
- Paper 7 – Patient-Related and Imaging-Based Differences Between Shoulder Arthroplasty Patients That Achieve Clinically Meaningful Outcome Improvements: Implications for Selecting Anatomic or Reverse Prostheses
- Paper 8 – Patient Survivorship after Anatomic Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: Are Patients Failing Before their Prosthetics? A 10 year minimum follow-up analysis
- Paper 9 – The Importance Of Distalization Decreases With Increased Glenoid-Sided Lateralization Following Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty
- Paper 10 – Teres Minor Deficiency Does Not Predict Clinically Inferior External Rotation after Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: A 2-Year Matched Cohort Study
Moderators: Mark Morrey, MD
Panel: Karimdad A. Otarodi, MD, Dominique Rouleau, MD, Jonathan Barlow, MD, Stephanie Muh, MD, Jonah Hebert-Davies, MD
Moderators: Anthony Romeo, MD
Panel: Larry Field, MD, Melissa Wright, MD, Peter MacDonald, MD, Ian Byram, MD, Seth Gamradt, MD
Brad Edwards, MD
Seth Gamradt, MD
JT Tokish, MD
Moderators: Michael O’Brien, MD, Peter Chalmers, MD
- Paper 11 – No difference in recurrent instability after open Bankart versus arthroscopic Bankart with remplissage for anterior glenohumeral instability with subcritical glenoid bone loss
- Paper 13 – Capsuloligamentous Laxity is a Risk Factor for Failure in Near Track Lesions Following Arthroscopic Anterior Shoulder Stabilization
- Paper 14 – Arthroscopic Anatomic Glenoid Reconstruction With Distal Tibia Allograft Has Excellent Outcomes at Medium-Term Follow-Up for Treating Anterior Shoulder Instability with Bone Loss
- Paper 15 – Clinical outcomes of Arthroscopic Latarjet as a Revision Surgery after Failed Arthroscopic Bankart Repair. A case-control study
Moderators: William Levine, MD Panel: Howard Routman, MD, Vani Sabesan, MD, Charles Jobin, MD, Mike Wiater, MD, Augustus Mazzocca
ASES Specialty Day Evaluations
To complete your ASES Specialty Day Evaluation Click HERE
Your CME Certificate will be available through your AAOS Account within the next few weeks. If you have additional questions, please contact AAOS Member Services at member@aaos.org.
Accreditation/CME
The 2023 Specialty Day Meeting of the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons has been planned and implemented in accordance with the accreditation requirements and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint providership of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons.
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons designates this live activity for a maximum of 5.5 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Educational Objectives
Upon completion of this program, participants will be able to:
Review basic science and orthopaedic problems relative to the shoulder and elbow.
- Examine the indications, techniques and results of various surgical procedures.
- Describe the management of common orthopaedic problems relative to the shoulder and elbow.
- Allow expert panelists to put into perspective new technologies.
Disclaimer
The material presented at the ASES 2023 Specialty Day Meeting has been made available by the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons for educational purposes only. This material is not intended to represent the only, nor necessarily best, method or procedure appropriate for the medical situations discussed, but rather is intended to present an approach, view, statement or opinion of the faculty, which may be helpful to others who face similar situations.
ASES disclaims any and all liability for injury or other damages resulting to any individuals attending the 2023 Specialty Day Meeting and for all claims which may arise out of the use of the techniques demonstrated therein by such individuals, whether these claims shall be asserted by a physician or by any other party.
No reproductions of any kind, including audiotapes and videotapes, may be made of the presentations at the ASES Specialty Day Meeting. ASES reserves all rights to such material, and commercial reproduction is specifically prohibited.
No part of this program may be copied, transcribed, reused, sold or posted on any web site without express written permission from American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons.