
Dr Sheila Strover
Clinical Editor
Degrees: BSc (Hons), MB BCh, MBA
Particular expertise: clinical editing, online publishing, patient advocacy, KNEEguru Founder
Location: Newquay, CON, TR7 1HU, United Kingdom
Dr Sheila Strover is the Founder and previous Clinical Editor of the KNEEguru website.
Her medical studies were completed at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa - BSc(Hons) (1968) and MBBCh (1974). She emigrated to the United Kingdom in 1983 and worked as an anaesthetist (anaesthesiologist) until 1989 when she left practice to work in a managerial position at the Droitwich Knee Clinic, which she co-founded with her knee surgeon ex-husband, <a href="/KNEEnotes/retired-knee-surgeon/dr-mr-angus-strover>Angus Strover.
There she was involved with the establishment of The Knee Foundation (an academic trust) and helped to design the content of their academic courses, as well as designing and bringing to production a 3-dimensional arthroscopic training model of the knee.
A sabbatical in at Warwick University 1973-1974 earned her an MBA (1994), and at this stage she also established the KNEEguru company and website and , with help from the shareholders, she started to build the site content which continues to grow.
Dr Strover resigned from the Clinic in 2002, and has concentrated her energies on creating within the KNEEguru website a successful venue for the collaboration of Patients, Clinical Practitioners and Industry in the knee field.
Contributions
The joint capsule – why it is key to understanding so much about the knee
The capsule of the knee plays a critical role in allowing normal knee movement.
Summing up the course on Anatomy of Knee Flexibility
Maintaining knee flexibility after injury or surgery is a complex interplay of many anatomical structures
Rehabilitation problems with regaining extension
Adhesions in the posterior capsular folds and scar tissue in the notch play a role in preventing full extension after injury or surgery.<
Rehabilitation problems with regaining flexion
Adhesions in the soft tissue folds around the knee can lock up both flexion and extension.
What powers flexion, and what allows flexion? Related but different concepts
A look at the muscles that power knee movement.