I am listed on the Health Point Website. This website provides details as to what general and laparoscopic surgery involves, procedures and treatments, and what you can expect when you arrive at your first appointment.
My contact details are listed on this site if you would like to make an appointment.
http://www.healthpoint.co.nz/default,56869.sm;jsessionid=31D5D4F71E99DF2F3C149E65F2F1DBB5?location=15634
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Sportsman’s Groin Injuries
Recent reporting of Jesse Ryder’s groin has brought these sports injuries to our attention. Sniggering blogs and vague commentating has obscured the fact that these injuries can be devastating for professional sportsmen. Recently, doctors have been discovering more about these injuries and how to treat them.
The groin in medical terms is that area of the body near the crease between the thigh and the lower abdomen. There are a wide range of conditions that can cause pain in the area and sports medicine doctors have now acquired experience in investigating, diagnosing and treating groin injuries. The pain can be caused by damage to and subsequent inflammation of the nearby pelvic bone (called the pubis), the hip joint of the muscles in the groin, either the thigh muscles or their attachment to the pubic bone or the lower abdominal muscles.
X-rays, bone scans, ultrasound examinations and MRI scans can be used to help with diagnosis if it is not obvious on physical examination. Treatment can be in the form of anti-inflammatory drugs, rest, physiotherapy, steroid injections, injections of one’s own blood into the painful site and surgery.
My own area of expertise is in the realm of surgery for groin strains. It was discovered in Britain about 20 years ago that some sportsmen would benefit from surgery to the groin so that they could return to their sport. Clearly, for professional sportsmen, this was an enormous boon – they could continue with their career.
The surgery is directed to the lower abdomen, called the inguinal region. Whereas some patients will have a demonstrable hernia (a hole in the abdominal wall) and thus operation is an obvious choice, quite often with groin injuries, there is no hernia and yet the same hernia operation somehow strengthens the muscles in the area or realigns them and alleviates the pain. Surgery is a last resort for anyone, but where all other measures have failed and the pain has persisted for months unabated and prevents the sportsman pursuing his career, there is an imperative to explore this option.
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Gary Stone - Laparoscopic Surgeon
I am a surgeon based in Wellington, New Zealand, dealing in Laparoscopic, Gallbladder and Hernia surgery, and also specialising in Sportsman's Hernia - treated by laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair.
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