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Kenneth A. Johnson

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  46
Citations -  697

Kenneth A. Johnson is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Osteotomy & Ostectomy. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 46 publications receiving 575 citations. Previous affiliations of Kenneth A. Johnson include Ohio State University.

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The haematoma and its role in bone healing.

TL;DR: Findings indicate that whenever possible the original haematoma formed upon injury should be conserved during clinical fracture treatment to benefit from the inherent healing potential.
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Pressure distributions on the medial tibial plateau after medial meniscal surgery and tibial plateau levelling osteotomy in dogs

TL;DR: Compromised function of the meniscus by either MMR or MCH result in stress concentration which may predispose to osteoarthritis, and change in pressure distribution and magnitude within the medial compartment of the stifle.
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Ex Vivo Biomechanical Evaluation of the Canine Cranial Cruciate Ligament-Deficient Stifle with Varying Angles of Stifle Joint Flexion and Axial loads after Tibial Tuberosity Advancement

TL;DR: This study supports the claim that reduction of CrTT occurs after TTA in the CrCL-deficient stifle joint through an alteration of PTA, and suggests the PTA(CT) may be a more precise method of determining PTA.
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Distal femoral lateral closing wedge osteotomy as a component of comprehensive treatment of medial patellar luxation and distal femoral varus in dogs

TL;DR: In this cohort of cases, DFO was a highly successful and repeatable component of surgical treatment for dogs with medial patellar luxation associated with femoral varus and provides more evidence of the high rate of concurrent cranial cruciate ligament disease in cases of medial patellite luxation complicated by femoralvarus.
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Biomechanical evaluation of shape-memory alloy staples for internal fixation—an in vitro study

TL;DR: Although staple fixations were not as stable as plate fixations in particular loading planes, double-staple constructs demonstrated the most consistent bending stiffness in all planes.