Here are three sports medicine physicians who recently joined new practices or took on new positions:
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Tyber Medical, based in Bethlehem, Pa., is an orthopedic device manufacturer.
MARS Bioimaging's large bore spectral scanner currently in development creates detailed 3D, full-color X-rays, allowing surgeons to peek inside a patient's body without having to operate, BGR reported.
Developer Cedar Fair recently broke ground on the Lee C. Jewett Sports Medicine Center at the Cedar Point Sports Center in Sandusky, Ohio, The Port Clinton News Herald reports.
Cheyenne (Wyo.) Regional Medical Center is the first hospital in the state to add Mazor Robotics' Mazor X system to its spinal surgery program.
The final patient was treated in clinical trials for Active Implants' NUsurface Meniscus Implant.
The American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine is taking applications for a grant to fund early osteoarthritis and/or OA progression prevention research, according to Philanthropy News Digest.
The Surgical Review Corp. named Napa, Calif.-based Queen of the Valley Hospital a Center of Excellence in Robotic Surgery.
Lexington, Ky.-based Saint Joseph Hospital and Saint Joseph Hospital East’s three da Vinci Xi robots allow their surgeons to perform minimally invasive procedures through using small incisions, The Lane Report said.
Neal ElAttrache, MD, will repair the damaged ulnar collateral ligament in the right elbow of Los Angeles Angels pitcher Garrett Richards, MLB.com reports.
