

Wang Jing

About me
The director of the Department of Joint and Sports Medicine of Hunan Provincial People's Hospital, master's supervisor, one of the top ten doctors of Hunan Provincial People's Hospital, one of the top ten outstanding young doctors of Hunan Provincial People's Hospital. Member of the Upper Limb Trauma Study Group of the Sports Medicine Branch of the Chinese Medical Association, member of the Sports Medicine Branch of the Chinese Medical Doctor Association, standing committee member of the Pain Rehabilitation Professional Committee of the Chinese Rehabilitation Medicine Association, standing committee member and chairman of the Hunan Training Center of the Shoulder and Elbow Sports Medicine Professional Committee of the Chinese Medicine Education Association, young member of the Upper Limb Study Group of the Sports Medicine Branch of the Chinese Medical Association, deputy chairman and leader of the Sports Injury and Rehabilitation Study Group of the Hunan Rehabilitation Medicine Association Orthopedics Professional Committee, deputy chairman of the Joint Surgery Professional Committee of the Hunan Rehabilitation Medicine Association, member of the Sports Medicine Professional Committee of the Hunan Medical Association, deputy group leader of the Arthroscopy Study Group of the Orthopedic Professional Committee of the Hunan Medical Association, member of the Joint Study Group of the Orthopedic Professional Committee of the Hunan Medical Association, deputy chairman of the Sarcoma Professional Committee of the Hunan Anti-Cancer Association. Member of the American Smith & Nephew Sports Medicine Lecturers Group, member of the American Johnson & Johnson Mitek Sports Medicine Lecturers Group. Previously studied sports medicine and arthroscopic technique at the Sports Medicine Research Institute of Peking University Third Hospital and Prince of Wales Hospital in Hong Kong. Established the first academic group of shoulder and elbow surgery in Hunan Province, opened the first shoulder pain clinic in the province, held the first provincial-level shoulder arthroscopy training course, performed the first shoulder arthroscopy micro-invasive surgery in the province, introduced techniques such as arthroscopic double-row anchor repair for rotator cuff tears, suture bridge technique, and knotless double-row repair technique, performed the first live broadcast shoulder arthroscopy surgery in the province and nationwide, performed the first shoulder joint dislocation Latarjet-Bristow surgery under arthroscopy in Hunan Province, and the first reverse shoulder replacement. Hosted one key project of the Provincial Department of Science and Technology and five provincial-level projects, published more than 10 academic papers as first author or corresponding author in SCI and core journals, and edited one monograph.
Proficient in diseases
Specializes in: joint pain, sports injuries, joint diseases, minimally invasive arthroscopic surgery, artificial joint replacement. Especially proficient in the diagnosis and treatment of shoulder joint diseases.

Voices

What medicine is good for ligament injury?
Ligament injuries first require assessment of whether the damage is acute or chronic before considering medications. For acute ligament injuries, there are key principles to follow. First, the injured area must rest and the joint should no longer be active. Second, immediately apply cold compresses. The temperature of the ice-water mixture touching the skin should be between 4℃ to 10℃. Apply the cold compress for about 10 to 15 minutes, generally not exceeding 20 minutes. If there is severe swelling, you can continue to apply cold compresses two hours later. Then, elevate the patient's limb and apply compression bandaging to the injured site, which forms the treatment principles for acute ligament injuries. For chronic ligament injuries, different situations require different approaches. For ligament injuries that do not affect joint stability, some topical medications can be used. This can include traditional Chinese medicines or anti-inflammatory and analgesic patches, which mainly improve local blood circulation and reduce local chronic inflammation. (Please use medications under the guidance of a doctor.)

Ligament injuries should be seen by the orthopedics department.
Ligament injuries are often a type of sports injury; therefore, when a ligament injury occurs, the first choice is usually a department of sports medicine. However, many hospitals do not have a sports medicine department. In such cases, ligament injuries are generally treated under orthopedic surgery. If the hospital does not have a sports medicine department, you can visit the orthopedic surgery department. If there is no orthopedic surgery department either, and it is just a general orthopedics clinic, you can go to the orthopedics clinic. Of course, if it is a smaller hospital without a specialized orthopedics clinic, you can visit the surgery department or the emergency surgery department. After some initial treatment, you may need to visit a more specialized hospital for further medical attention.

Do ligament injuries fear the cold?
Ligament injuries should not naturally be sensitive to cold; however, due to impaired blood circulation in the damaged area or poor blood supply due to scar repair, the circulation in the injured tendons becomes worse compared to other areas. In cold conditions, this can lead to even poorer blood flow. When circulation is poor, it's hard for metabolic byproducts to be removed from the area, leading to their accumulation, which can stimulate the injured site and cause pain. Therefore, areas with ligament injuries often become sensitive to cold, as the cold causes blood vessels to constrict, leading to the accumulation of metabolic by-products and resulting in pain at the affected site.