Contact information
Colleges
Paul Monk
FRCS (Tr+Orth), DPhil
Honorary Departmental Clinical Lecturer in Orthopaedics
Paul Monk is the NIHR Academic Clinical Lecturer in Orthopaedics and Honorary Specialist Registrar in Trauma and Orthopaedics at Oxford University Hospitals. Paul holds grants from the Academy of Medical Sciences and Orthopaedic Research UK. He has secured intellectual property for musculo-skeletal ultrasound solutions, bespoke joint resurfacing methods and intra-operative devices and in 2013 he co-founded the Oxford Orthopaedic Evolutionary Group (OOEG) with Jonathan Rees and Fritz Vollrath.
Paul graduated from GKT School of Medicine, University of London in 2003 having previously obtained an honours degree in Medical Sciences and an MSc from the University of Leeds, with a focus on shoulder anatomy. After basic surgical training in New Zealand, Australia and Oxford he entered specialist Orthopaedic training in Oxford in 2009.
During higher surgical training he developed his research interests in sports orthopaedics, bespoke solutions for arthritic joints, dynamic musculoskeletal imaging and evolutionary medicine. This period of research resulted in the award of a DPhil (PhD) from St. Johns’ College, University of Oxford in 2011 with a thesis titled “The Patellofemoral Joint: Form and Function”.
Recent publications
What are the perceived benefits and barriers to the use of robot-assisted total knee arthroplasty? A survey of members of the European Knee Society.
Journal article
Luyckx T. et al, (2023), Int Orthop, 47, 405 - 412
Introduction of ROSA robotic-arm system for total knee arthroplasty is associated with a minimal learning curve for operative time.
Journal article
Bolam SM. et al, (2022), J Exp Orthop, 9
Disease progression, aseptic loosening and bearing dislocations are the main revision indications after lateral unicompartmental knee arthroplasty: a systematic review.
Journal article
Tay ML. et al, (2022), J ISAKOS, 7, 132 - 141
Integrating wearables and modelling for monitoring rehabilitation following total knee joint replacement.
Journal article
Yeung S. et al, (2022), Comput Methods Programs Biomed, 225
Tibial metaphyseal cones combined with short stems perform as well as long stems in revision total knee arthroplasty.
Journal article
Batinica B. et al, (2022), ANZ J Surg, 92, 2254 - 2260