Kenji Takagi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Professor Kenji Takagi (1888–1963)[1] was a Japanese orthopedic surgeon, noted for being the first to carry out a successful arthroscopy of the knee.[2]

Takagi was attached to Tokyo University (where he succeeded ) in 1918 when he carried out the ground-breaking operation on a cadaver. He had been influenced by the work of Danish surgeon .[3] In 1922, he went to Germany to study the use of x-ray technology there.[4] Following World War II, Takagi's pupil Masaki Watanabe, carried on his work.

Kenji Takagi, was a Japanese orthopedic surgeon

References[]

  1. ^ Operative Arthroscopy by John B. McGinty, Stephen S. Burkhart, Robert W. Jackson, Donald H. Johnson, John C. Richmond, p3
  2. ^ Shoulderdoc.co.uk Lennard Funk, Advances in Shoulder Arthroscopy. Accessed 28 October 2012
  3. ^ Operative Arthroscopy by John B. McGinty, Stephen S. Burkhart, Robert W. Jackson, Donald H. Johnson, John C. Richmond, p4
  4. ^ Nakamura, Kozo (2006). "Professor Yoshinori Tashiro's contribution to Orthopedic Surgery". Journal of Orthopaedic Science. 11 (2): 115–117. doi:10.1007/s00776-006-1001-5. PMC 2780602. PMID 16568381.
Retrieved from ""