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CAM NEWTON'S FOOT INJURY (Lisfranc) Explained By Orthopedic Surgeon Dr. Chris Raynor

CAM NEWTON'S FOOT INJURY (Lisfranc) Explained By Orthopedic Surgeon Dr. Chris Raynor Cam Newton's foot injury explained by orthopedic surgeon Dr. Chris Raynor is the topic today on the channel. Cam Newton suffered a Lisfranc injury during the 3rd game of the preseason and continued to play for several games afterward. He was not able to play without pain and sought the advice of an orthopedic surgeon.

Cam was diagnosed with a Lisfranc foot injury. Cam elected to treat this non-operatively. He remained on the sidelines for several weeks. In late October he returned to his surgeon for reassessment. Apparently, the news was not as favorable as Cam would have liked. It seems that his foot injury was not healing quickly enough. Cam went to get a second opinion from another orthopedic surgeon and he is now considering surgical treatment of his Lisfranc injury. Today Dr. Chris is going to go over the video from the game in which he was injured, and try to explain in more detail exactly what is going on with Cam, and when we can expect to see him playing football again.

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Dr. Chris Raynor has been a practicing orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine physician for over ten years. He is on staff at the Cornwall Community Hospital and the Ottawa University Sports Medicine Clinic. He also owns his own integrated healthcare facility in Ottawa, Ontario called Human 2.0 which is all about preventative medicine and injury prevention, and where they take an active approach to medicine and rehabilitation, servicing patients from injury to wellness and beyond.

Dr. Raynor specializes in common arthroscopic and arthroplasty procedures such as knee scopes (meniscus repair for meniscal tears, cartilage defects, synovitis, removal of loose bodies, and ACL reconstruction), shoulder scopes (rotator cuff repair for rotator cuff tears, labral tears and SLAP tears, as well as AC joint osteoarthritis), hip scopes (for labral tears, cam lesions, and FAI), ankle scopes (for ankle instability, anterior impingement, removal of loose bodies, and osteochondral defects). He does hip replacements for osteoarthritis of the hip, knee replacements for osteoarthritis, osteotomies for deformities of the femur and tibia, and for patellofemoral osteoarthritis, instability, or pain.

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