Mervyn John CrossOAM (3 July 1941 – 25 August 2023) was an Australian rugby league footballer and orthopaedic surgeon.[3] He played in Australia's major competition the New South Wales Rugby League (NSWRL) but Cross, a doctor, was better known for his achievements in the field of sports medicine as an orthopaedic surgeon.
NSWRL career
Cross was known as a strong defensive forward who played for South Sydney (1960–61), Eastern Suburbs (1962) and North Sydney in the 1960s. At the end of the 1990s, Cross took up a position as an NRL board member.[4]
Orthopaedic surgery career
Cross was a pioneer in the field of knee surgery, entering orthopaedics in what turned out to be a golden age for the specialty. Cross trained in the 1970s in Georgia, USA and brought ideas on clinical practice back to Australia.[5][6] He moved the North Sydney Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Centre (NSOSMC) in 1983 to Crows Nest with Ken Crichton, Greg Craig and Ian Collier,[7] after establishing it in North Sydney in the late 1970s.
Some of the ideas he brought to NSOSMC, which were revolutionary at the time, but have now become commonplace were:
sub-specialization of orthopaedic surgeons into single joint areas. Cross only operated on the knee joint (from the late 1980s onwards) and directed referrals for other joint problems to colleagues in the same practice who sub-specialised in foot and ankle, hip, or shoulder
that non-surgical sports medicine physicians should become an independent specialty in Australia and be the doctors who provided best-quality non-surgical sports injury management. Cross was appointed an inaugural honorary Fellow of the Australasian College of Sport and Exercise Physicians[8]
regular intake of visiting overseas Fellows, including Jonathan Webb
Not only was Cross a knee sub-specialist, he also sub-specialized in performing patella tendon autograft ACL reconstruction. His preferred technique included using an anteromedial portal to drill the femoral tunnel (rather than a transtibial drilling technique).[13]
Cross-bracing technique
After his surgical retirement in the early 2010s, Cross teamed up with his son Tom and others to trial a new non-surgical technique for managing ACL injuries where the knee is braced at 90 degrees for six weeks to promote healing in the anatomical position.[14][15]
^Hughston, JC; Andrews, JR; Cross, MJ; Moschi, A (March 1976). "Classification of knee ligament instabilities. Part II. The lateral compartment". The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. American Volume. 58 (2): 173–9. doi:10.2106/00004623-197658020-00002. PMID1254620.
^Norwood, LA; Cross, MJ (January 1979). "Anterior cruciate ligament: functional anatomy of its bundles in rotatory instabilities". The American Journal of Sports Medicine. 7 (1): 23–6. doi:10.1177/036354657900700106. PMID420384. S2CID21603984.
^Palmer, SH; Servant, CT; Maguire, J; Machan, S; Parish, EN; Cross, MJ (February 2004). "Surgical reconstruction of severe patellofemoral maltracking". Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research. 419 (419): 144–8. doi:10.1097/00003086-200402000-00023. PMID15021145. S2CID36493837.
^Palmer, SH; Servant, CT; Maguire, J; Parish, EN; Cross, MJ (March 2002). "Ability to kneel after total knee replacement". The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. British Volume. 84 (2): 220–2. doi:10.1302/0301-620x.84b2.12568. PMID11922363.
^Chapman, A; Murray, J; Cross, T; Cross, M (2006). "The ACL reconstruction question: bone-patellar tendon-bone vs. hamstring tendon". Sport Health. 24 (1): 11–15.