blake griffin injury
January 21, 2010
The doctor who carried out surgical treatment on Blake Griffin’s conked out left kneecap articulates the Los Angeles Clippers’ No. 1 on the whole draft pick is supposed to be capable of playing basketball maneuvers within the period of three to four months. Griffin experienced a two-part modus operandi on Wednesday on the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Center in Los Angeles. Dr. Neal ElAttrache patched up Griffin’s patellar muscle and operated a “left patellar fragment excision,” as indicated by the Clippers.

“This is a rare problem. It was the first time that we’ve had to do anything like this,” ElAttrache stated at Staples Center previous to the Clippers’ match in opposition to the Chicago Bulls. “Blake had a stress fracture at the bottom of the kneecap. In October, he pulled that off. For it to pull off like that is a bit of a rare problem. But the fragment did not involve any of the joint’s surface. And that’s a big determining factor.”
“The quality of his patellar tendon also looked quite good,” ElAttrache told extra. “So the two things that we would have been concerned about having some trouble getting him back or having long-term problems, neither of those things were there. So, if you had to design how this day would go, this is how I would have dreamed it up.”
A slit was made where the muscle connects to the base of the kneecap; it is the place of finding of fracture. The portion of bone that was bringing about the difficulty was joined to the deep strings beneath the facade of the muscle. As a result, ElAttrache was up to disbursing the antisocial part of the base of the kneecap and after that strengthen the patellar muscle patch-up.
As maintained by ElAttrache, “We were very happy that the piece itself didn’t damage a significant portion of the tendon. So that bodes well for his rehab and his prognosis.”
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