Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mary Lou Stone is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mary Lou Stone.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1985

Instrumented measurement of anterior laxity of the knee.

Dale M. Daniel; L L Malcom; G Losse; Mary Lou Stone; Raymond A. Sachs; R Burks

We performed instrumented measurement of anterior-posterior laxity of the knee in thirty-three cadaver specimens, 338 normal subjects, and eighty-nine patients with unilateral disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament. The test instrument was the Medmetric knee arthrometer, model KT-2000. We measured total anterior-posterior laxity, produced by anterior and posterior loads of eighty-nine newtons (twenty pounds), and the anterior compliance index. The total anterior-posterior laxity is composed of an anterior displacement and a posterior displacement; these are measured from a testing reference position, defined as the resting position of the knee after applying and then releasing a posterior load of eighty-nine newtons. The anterior compliance index is defined as the anterior displacement between an anterior load of sixty-seven newtons and one of eighty-nine newtons. All tests were performed with the knee held on a thigh support that placed the knee in 20 +/- 5 degrees of flexion. The mean anterior displacement at eighty-nine newtons was 5.7 millimeters in a group of normal subjects and 13.0 millimeters in a group of patients with a disrupted anterior cruciate ligament. Ninety-two per cent of the normal subjects had a left knee-right knee difference in anterior displacement of no more than two millimeters, while 96 per cent of the patients with a unilateral disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament had an injured knee-normal knee difference in anterior displacement of more than two millimeters. Ninety-three per cent of the normal subjects had a difference in the left-right compliance index of no more than 0.5 millimeter, and 85 per cent of the patients with unilateral disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament had a difference in the compliance index of the injured and normal sides of more than 0.5 millimeter.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1985

Instrumented measurement of anterior knee laxity in patients with acute anterior cruciate ligament disruption

Dale M. Daniel; Mary Lou Stone; Raymond A. Sachs; Lawrence L. Malcom

Instrumented anterior/posterior laxity measurements were performed on 138 patients evaluated within 2 weeks of injury with their first traumatic knee hemar throsis. All patients were tested with the MEDmetric Arthrometer model KT-1000 in a knee injury clinic. Seventy-five of the patients had knee arthroscopy. Thirty-three had arthrometer laxity tests under anes thesia. Eighty-seven percent of patients arthroscoped had anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears and 41 % had meniscus tears. One hundred twenty normal subjects were tested to establish normal anterior laxity values. Three tests were used to evaluate anterior laxity: anterior displacement between a 15 and 20 pound force (compliance index), anterior displacement with a 20 pound force, and an terior displacement with a high manually applied force. Displacement measurements in normal subjects re vealed a wide range of normal laxity with a small right knee-left knee difference. For example, the 20 pound anterior displacement range was 3 to 13.5 mm with a right knee-left knee difference (mean ± SD, 0.8 ± 0.7 mm). Eighty-eight percent of the normals had a right- left difference of less than 2 mm. In the 53 patients arthroscoped who had complete ACL tears, the anterior laxity measurements performed in the clinic were suggestive or diagnostic of pathologic anterior laxity in 50 patients.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2004

Epidemiology and Natural History of Acute Patellar Dislocation

Donald C. Fithian; Elizabeth W. Paxton; Mary Lou Stone; Patricia D. Silva; Daniel K. Davis; David A. Elias; Lawrence M. White

Background The goals of this study were to (1) define the epidemiology of acute patellar dislocation, (2) determine the risk of subsequent patellar instability episodes (subluxation and/or redislocation) during the study period, and (3) identify risk factors for subsequent instability episodes. Study Design Prospective cohort study. Methods The authors prospectively followed 189 patients for a period of 2 to 5 years. Historical data, injury mechanisms, and physical and radiographic measurements were recorded to identify potential risk factors for poor outcomes. Results Risk was highest among females 10 to 17 years old. Patients presenting with a prior history of instability were more likely to be female (P < .05) and were older than first-time dislocation patients (P < .05). Fewer first-time dislocators (17%) had episodes of instability during follow-up than patients with a previous history of instability (49%) (P < .01). After adjusting for demographics, patients with a prior history had 7 times higher odds of subsequent instability episodes during follow-up than first time dislocators (adjusted odds ratio = 6.6, P < .001). Conclusions Patellar dislocators who present with a history of patellofemoral instability are more likely to be female, are older, and have greater risk of subsequent patellar instability episodes than first-time patellar dislocators. Risk of recurrent patellar instability episodes in either knee is much higher in this group than in first-time dislocators.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2005

Prospective Trial of a Treatment Algorithm for the Management of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament–Injured Knee

Donald C. Fithian; Elizabeth W. Paxton; Mary Lou Stone; William F. Luetzow; Rick P. Csintalan; Daniel Phelan; Dale M. Daniel

Background Specific guidelines for operative versus nonoperative management of anterior cruciate ligament injuries do not yet exist. Hypothesis Surgical risk factors can be used to indicate whether reconstruction or conservative management is best for an individual patient. Study Design Prospective nonrandomized controlled clinical trial; Level of evidence, 2. Methods Patients were classified as high, moderate, or low risk using preinjury sports participation and knee laxity measurements. Early anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (within 3 months of injury) was recommended to high-risk patients and conservative care to low-risk patients. It was recommended that moderate-risk patients have either early reconstruction or conservative care, according to the day of presentation. Assessment of subjective outcomes, activity, physical measurements, and radiographs was performed at mean follow-up of 6.6 years. Results Early phase conservative management resulted in more late phase meniscus surgery than did early phase reconstruction at all risk levels (high risk, 25% vs 6.5%; moderate risk, 37% vs 7.7%, P =. 01; low risk, 16% vs 0%). Early- and late-reconstruction patients’ Tegner scores increased from presurgery to follow-up (P <. 001) but did not return to preinjury levels. Early-reconstruction patients had higher rates of degenerative change on radiographs than did nonreconstruction patients (P <. 05). Conclusions Early phase reconstruction reduced late phase knee laxity, risk of symptomatic instability, and the risk of late meniscus tear and surgery. Moderate- and high-risk patients had similar rates of late phase injury and surgery. Reconstruction did not prevent the appearance of late degenerative changes on radiographs. Relationship between bone contusion on initial magnetic resonance images and the finding of degenerative changes on follow-up radiographs were not detected. The treatment algorithm used in this study was effective in predicting risk of late phase knee surgery.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2000

Characteristics of Patients With Primary Acute Lateral Patellar Dislocation and Their Recovery Within the First 6 Months of Injury

Dave M. Atkin; Donald C. Fithian; Kent S. Marangi; Mary Lou Stone; Barbara E. Dobson; Cerrah Mendelsohn

We prospectively studied the characteristics and early recovery of an unselected population of patients who had acute first-time lateral patellar dislocation. The recovery program used standardized rehabilitation, emphasizing range of motion, muscle strength, and return of function. Patients returned to stressful activities including sports as tolerated when they regained full passive range of motion, had no effusion, and when quadriceps muscle strength was at least 80% compared with the noninjured limb. Seventy-four patients met the enrollment criteria; 37 men and 37 women. The average age was 19.9 years, and preinjury sports participation was similar to that of ligament-injury patients. Four percent of patients (N 3) had a history of birth complications, 3% (N 2) had a history of lower extremity problems as an infant or child, and 9% (N 7) had a family history of patellar dislocation. Radiographs revealed a 50% incidence (N 37) of patella alta; all patients demonstrated lateral patellar overhang. Patients regained range of motion (mean, 0° to 132°) by 6 weeks. Sports participation remained significantly reduced throughout the first 6 months after injury, with the greatest limitations in kneeling and squatting. At 6 months, 58% of patients (N 43) noted limitation in strenuous activities. The patients who had acute primary patellar dislocation were young and active. Most injuries occurred during sports, and few patients had abnormal physical features, contradicting any stereotype of an overweight, sedentary, adolescent girl whose patella dislocates with little or no trauma.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1988

Use of the quadriceps active test to diagnose posterior cruciate-ligament disruption and measure posterior laxity of the knee.

Dale M. Daniel; Mary Lou Stone; P Barnett; Raymond A. Sachs

Orthopaedic surgeons routinely use passive tests, in which the displacing force is applied externally, to evaluate the integrity of the ligaments of the knee. Using a quadriceps active test, in which the muscle contractures of the subject served as the displacing force, tibial displacement was measured with an arthrometer in ninety-two subjects: sixty-seven who had an acute or chronic rupture of the posterior or anterior cruciate ligament and twenty-five who had normal knees. With the knee joint in 90 degrees of flexion, contraction of the quadriceps resulted in anterior translation of the tibia in forty-one of forty-two knees that had a documented disruption of the posterior cruciate ligament. This anterior translation did not occur in the contralateral, normal knee of the same subjects; in the knees of the twenty-five normal subjects; or in twenty-five knees that had a known unilateral anterior cruciate-ligament disruption.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1985

The measurement of anterior knee laxity after ACL reconstructive surgery.

Malcom Ll; Dale M. Daniel; Mary Lou Stone; Sachs R

An objective clinical instrument known as a knee ligament Arthrometer was developed. The instrumentation system was applied to measurements of knee ligament laxity in the operating room with the patients under anesthesia. Prereconstruction and immediate postreconstruction measurements were made with the patient still on the operating table. The change in laxity of the patients operated knee as compared to the opposite nonoperated control knee was documented for 19 chronic and 24 acute patients. Four separate reconstruction types were studied in the operating room. The immediate postreconstruction measurements documented that all four of the reconstruction types were equally effective in the immediate restoration of normal laxity in the ACL-deficient knees. The Arthrometer proved to be a useful tool for confirming that each patients normal knee laxity was reestablished in the O.R. by its reconstruction.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2007

Can the Need for Future Surgery for Acute Traumatic Anterior Shoulder Dislocation Be Predicted

Raymond A. Sachs; David Lin; Mary Lou Stone; Elizabeth W. Paxton; Mary Kuney

BACKGROUND Some surgeons believe that they can identify patients who are at high risk for shoulder redislocation and that these patients are best served by immediate surgical stabilization. This natural history study was performed to examine the validity of this concept and to determine whether it is possible to predict the need for future surgery at the time of the index injury and examination. METHODS One hundred and thirty-one patients were followed for an average of four years after their first shoulder dislocation. An extensive history was recorded and a thorough physical examination was performed on each patient. Final evaluation consisted of a physical examination, radiographic evaluation, and determination of three outcome measurements. RESULTS Twenty-nine (22%) of the 131 patients requested surgery during the follow-up period. There were twenty Bankart repairs and nine rotator cuff repairs. Forty-three patients (33%) had at least one recurrent dislocation. Thirty-nine of these patients were in the group of ninety patients under the age of forty years. Thirty-seven of these thirty-nine patients either participated in contact or collision sports or used the arm at or above chest level in their occupation. Eighteen (49%) of these thirty-seven patients had surgery. Only two of the more sedentary patients had redislocation, and none had surgery. Four (10%) of the forty-one patients over the age of forty had a redislocation, but none required a Bankart repair. However, eight (20%) of the forty-one patients required a rotator cuff repair. Eighty-eight (67%) of the 131 patients never had a redislocation. Their outcome scores were high and equivalent to those of the cohort of patients who had had a successful Bankart repair of an unstable shoulder. Patients who had redislocation but chose to cope with the instability rather than have surgery had lower outcome scores. Twenty-two (51%) of the forty-three patients who had recurrent instability had only one redislocation during the entire follow-up period, whereas some patients had as many as twelve complete redislocations. CONCLUSIONS Younger patients involved in contact or collision sports or who require overhead occupational use of the arm are more likely to have a redislocation of the shoulder than are their less active peers or older persons. However, even in the highest-risk groups, only approximately half of patients with shoulder redislocation requested surgery within the follow-up period. Early surgery based on the presumption of future dislocations, unhappiness, and disability cannot be justified.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2003

The Reliability and Validity of Knee-Specific and General Health Instruments in Assessing Acute Patellar Dislocation Outcomes

Elizabeth W. Paxton; Donald C. Fithian; Mary Lou Stone; Patricia D. Silva

Background The most reliable and valid instruments for assessing patient outcome after patellar dislocation have not been identified. Hypothesis Knee-specific and general health instruments will differ in validity and reliability for patients with patellar dislocation. Study Design Prospective cohort study. Methods Subjects consisted of 153 patients with acute patellar dislocation (110 with first-time dislocations and 43 with a history of patellofemoral subluxation or dislocation). We administered the modified International Knee Documentation Committee form, Kujala, Fulkerson, Lysholm, Tegner, Short Form 36, and Musculoskeletal Function Assessment instruments on two separate occasions (test-retest reliability). Validity was assessed by comparing scores of the two groups and by comparing scores of patients with and without recurrent subluxations/dislocations during follow-up. Results The knee-specific instruments yielded the highest test-retest reliability. The knee-specific and general health instruments identified higher disability levels in the patients with a history of patellofemoral problems than in those with first-time dislocations. The general health instruments identified higher disability levels in patients with patellar dislocation than published norms. The Fulkerson and Lysholm scales were the only instruments to differentiate between patients with and without recurrent subluxations/dislocations. Conclusions Knee-specific scales yielded higher reliability coefficients and stronger validity than did general health instruments. Knee-specific, general health, and activity level instruments are complementary and in combination provide a more complete assessment for patients with patellar dislocation.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1996

Combined injuries of the anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments of the knee. Effect of treatment on stability and function of the joint.

Diane Hillard-Sembell; Dale M. Daniel; Mary Lou Stone; Barbara E. Dobson; Donald C. Fithian

We performed a retrospective study of sixty-six patients (forty-one male and twenty-five female) who had a combined injury of the anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments. Our purpose was to determine the prevalence of late valgus instability of the knee. The mean age of the patients was thirty-five years (range, sixteen to sixty-three years). The mean follow-up interval was forty-five months (range, twenty-one to 108 months). Twenty patients had been injured while snow-skiing; twenty-four, during other sports activities; seven, in a motor-vehicle accident; and the remaining fifteen, during activities of daily living. Eleven patients had reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament and repair of the medial collateral ligament, thirty-three had reconstruction of only the anterior cruciate ligament, and twenty-two were managed non-operatively. There was no evidence of valgus instability on clinical examination at the most recent follow-up visit. However, there was evidence of instability on stress roentgenograms of the knee in eight (13 per cent) of sixty patients. With the numbers available, we could detect no relationship between the presence of valgus instability and the method of treatment of the ligamentous tears (p > 0.4). We also compared the results for twenty-one of the thirty-three patients who had a combined ligamentous injury and reconstruction of only the anterior cruciate ligament with those for thirty-seven patients who had reconstruction of an isolated tear of the anterior cruciate ligament. After a mean follow-up interval of thirty-five months (range, twenty-one to sixty-six months), there was no difference in the anterior displacement, impairment of function, level of participation in sports activities, results of the one-leg-hop for distance test, or strength as determined by testing on a Cybex machine. On the basis of the findings in this study, we believe that, when there is mild or moderate valgus instability, an injury of the medial collateral ligament does not need to be repaired when the anterior cruciate ligament is repaired after a combined ligamentous injury.

Collaboration


Dive into the Mary Lou Stone's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dale M. Daniel

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dev K. Mishra

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patricia D. Silva

Boston Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles L. Beck

Louisiana State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Drez

Louisiana State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge