Orthopedic surgeon Dr muhammad Ismaeel Mohmand

Orthopedic surgeon Dr muhammad Ismaeel Mohmand

Share

Orthopedics surgeon ,hand uper limb and microvascular surgeon, arthroplasty surgeon

06/07/2026

یہ یورپ میں ہسپتالوں کا نظام ہے جہاں پر 3 دن میں ایک انجکشن نہیں لگتا اور 6 ماہ علاج کیلئے انتظار کرنا پڑتا ہے۔۔۔یہاں پر لوگ 5 منٹ انتظار نہیں کر سکتے۔۔۔۔۔

Photos from Orthopedic surgeon Dr muhammad Ismaeel Mohmand's post 06/07/2026

ایک 30 سال کا جوان جس کو دبئی میں چھوٹ لگی تھی اور کلائی کی دو ھڈی ٹوٹ گئی تھی ۔۔بغیر ٹانکے کے ایک مشین سے صرف 15 منٹ میں آپریشن کیا اور ہڈی کو اپنی جگہ پر فکس کیا۔۔۔الحمدللہ مریض نہایت مطمئن رہا
آرتھوپیڈک اینڈ ہینڈ سرجن
ڈاکٹر محمد اسماعیل مہمند

Photos from Orthopedic surgeon Dr muhammad Ismaeel Mohmand's post 12/06/2026

اکثر مریض آتے ہیں اور کلائی میں درد کی شکایت کرتے ہیں کہ ہماری ھڈی یا جوڑ میں مسلہ ہے حالانکہ یہ پٹھے کا مسلئہ ہوتا ہے جس کے بارے میں نیچے دی گئی تحریر لکھی ہے
What is De Quervain’s Tenosynovitis?

It sounds complicated, but it’s simply the swelling of the tendons around the base of your thumb. When these tendons get irritated, they rub against the narrow "tunnel" they pass through, causing pain whenever you turn your wrist, grasp objects, or make a fist.

Common culprits: Repetitive hand or wrist motions, text/gaming thumbs, or lifting a baby.

If your wrist is screaming for a break, it might be time to get it checked out!

12/06/2026

𝐑𝐚𝐝𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐓𝐮𝐧𝐧𝐞𝐥 𝐒𝐲𝐧𝐝𝐫𝐨𝐦𝐞: 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐒𝐭𝐮𝐛𝐛𝐨𝐫𝐧 "𝐓𝐞𝐧𝐧𝐢𝐬 𝐄𝐥𝐛𝐨𝐰"

Lateral elbow pain is almost instantly diagnosed as Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow). But when traditional tendon-loading exercises, braces, and friction massages fail to bring relief, the true culprit is often neurological: Radial Tunnel Syndrome (RTS).
Recent literature emphasizes that this nerve entrapment is consistently under-recognized, leading patients to undergo months of ineffective tendinopathy treatments for what is actually a compression neuropathy.

👉 What Is Radial Tunnel Syndrome?
RTS is the compression of the deep branch of the posterior interosseous nerve (PIN), a branch of the radial nerve, as it passes through the proximal forearm.
Unlike most nerve compressions that cause numbness and tingling, RTS primarily causes deep, aching pain. Because it doesn't present with classic cutaneous sensory loss, it easily flies under the radar.

👉 Pathophysiology
The radial nerve can be pinched at dynamic anatomical choke points around the elbow. The most frequent site of entrapment is the proximal aponeurotic edge of the supinator muscle, known as the Arcade of Frohse.
Normal pressure inside the radial tunnel is around 50mmHg, but with passive stretching of the supinator (like forced wrist flexion), the pressure can drastically increase to 250mmHg, crushing the nerve.

👉 Typical Pain Distribution
Patients typically present with:

• A deep, aching pain in the dorsoradial proximal forearm
• Pain that increases during forearm rotation and lifting activities
• Muscle weakness that is secondary to pain rather than actual muscle denervation

👉 Key Clinical Signs
Several clinical findings can differentiate RTS from classic Tennis Elbow:

✔️ Maximal Tenderness Location: In lateral epicondylitis, tenderness is directly over the epicondyle. In RTS, maximal tenderness is located 3 to 5 centimeters distal to the lateral epicondyle, right over the mobile wad of the supinator arch.
✔️ Provocative Testing: Passive forearm pronation combined with wrist flexion directly reproduces pain at the radial tunnel.
✔️ Diagnostic Ultrasound: Neuromuscular ultrasound can now identify the presence of distal pseudoneuromas and nerve edema in chronic RTS cases.

👉 Why It Is Frequently Misdiagnosed
Because both conditions share a region and trigger movements, RTS is frequently confused with lateral epicondylitis; in fact, the two conditions coexist in approximately 5% of patients.

👉 Evidence-Based Treatment Approaches
Treating the extensor tendon won't decompress the nerve.

📌 Conservative management
• Activity modification is the first line of treatment, specifically avoiding prolonged elbow extension combined with forearm pronation and wrist flexion
• Temporary splinting to restrict provocative ranges of motion
• Strengthening and mobility exercises to enhance flexibility and prevent further compression

📌 Interventional options
• Local triamcinolone (corticosteroid) injections are frequently used, though recent 2024 placebo-controlled trials suggest they may not offer superior long-term clinical outcomes compared to placebo.
• Surgical decompression (approached dorsally or volarly) remains an option for refractory cases.

📌 Clinical Takeaway
If your "Tennis Elbow" patient has point tenderness in the muscle belly rather than the bone, stop loading the tendon. Shift your focus to decompressing the radial nerve to finally break the cycle of chronic pain.

✅ References
• Hand (N Y), 2026 – Clinical Outcomes of Operative Management for Radial Tunnel Syndrome According to Surgical Approach: A Systematic Review.
• Clinical Neurophysiology, 2025 – Diagnostic neuromuscular ultrasound of radial tunnel syndrome with the presence of a distal pseudoneuroma.
• Journal of Hand Surgery, 2024 – Investigating the Effect of Triamcinolone Local Injection on Clinical Outcomes of Patients With Radial Tunnel Syndrome: A Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial.

Photos from Orthopedic surgeon Dr muhammad Ismaeel Mohmand's post 11/06/2026

بغیر کٹ لگائے ہاتھ کے ھڈیوں کو اپنی جگہ پر واپس لائے اور ایک ہڈی کو سکرو کے ذریعے فکس کیا Tavernier’s method of reduction of dorsal perilunate dislocations :

With the wrist slightly extended, gentle manual traction is applied (1).

Without releasing such traction, and while the
lunate (L) is stabilized palmarly by the surgeon’s thumb, the wrist is flexed until a
snap occurs (2).

This indicates that the proximal pole of the capitate has overcome the dorsal horn of the lunate.

At this point, traction is released, and the wrist is brought back to neutral (3).

Photos from Orthopedic surgeon Dr muhammad Ismaeel Mohmand's post 09/06/2026

Correction of wrist deformity

09/06/2026

Fixing small, avulsed fragments in jersey finger injuries remains technically demanding. Can buttress plating stabilize these fractures without violating the avulsed bone fragment?

A recent retrospective series evaluated 12 patients with type 3–5 FDP tendon avulsion injuries treated using a buttress plate technique without screw placement in the avulsed fragment.

BUTTRESS PLATING FOR TYPE 3-4-5 JERSEY FINGER FRACTURES: WITHOUT BONE FRAGMENT DISTRUPTION AND WITH A CHALLENGING RATE OF HARDWARE REMOVAL-A CASE SERIES
by Ömer F. Kümbüloğlu, Yusuf Altuntas, and İsmail Demirkale

All patients achieved union, with functional DIP motion reported in most type 3 and type 5 injuries. The technique aimed to stabilize small fragments while avoiding disruption of the FDP tendon attachment site and further comminution of the fragment.

The authors suggest the buttress plate technique may be a useful option in selected type 3 and type 5 jersey finger fractures, particularly when fragment size limits conventional fixation strategies, whereas outcomes in the single type 4 case were less favorable. However, plate-related tenderness remained a notable issue, leading to hardware removal in 9 of 12 patients.

Access the full article in the June 2026 issue at the link in our bio.

09/06/2026

Safe zone (area of radial head that doesnt articulate with ulna) for fixation of fracture

06/06/2026
Want your business to be the top-listed Beauty Salon in Peshawar?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Telephone

Address

Peshawar University
Peshawar
25431