Sarah L. Whitehouse is an Orthopedic Surgeon based in Kelvin Grove, Brisbane. Her practice is on Victoria Park Rd, Kelvin Grove, QLD 4059, Australia.
Sarah’s work is mainly about caring for bones, joints, and the tissues around them. In many cases, people see her when everyday movement starts to feel harder—walking, bending, getting out of a chair, or even getting comfortable at night.
She looks after issues like hip and knee problems, including osteoarthritis and arthritis. That can be painful and can build up slowly over time, so it’s not just about one injury or one bad day. At times, her care also covers frozen shoulder, bursitis, and tendinitis, where the joint or tendon gets irritated and movement becomes stiff or sore.
When joints are badly affected, treatment may include things like hip replacement or knee replacement. Sarah also works with conditions that need joint-focused procedures, such as osteotomy and bone graft work. Some patients are dealing with problems around the bone structure or changes over time, including osteolysis syndrome recessive.
She can also help with long-term mobility concerns, including hypermobile joints. This can mean joints move more than they should, and it may come with ongoing aches or instability for some people. Sarah’s approach stays practical and aims to get people back to steady, everyday function.
There are also a few other conditions listed that may come up in orthopaedic care. These include delierium, malnutrition, obesity, and deep vein thrombosis. At times, these are part of a bigger picture around recovery and overall health, especially around procedures.
Experience: specific years and past roles aren’t listed here, but her service coverage shows she works across both joint treatment and joint-related procedures, and she deals with a range of common and complex orthopaedic presentations.
Education and research: brief education details and research interests aren’t provided. Clinical trials aren’t listed either, so there’s no specific trial information available here. If you want, you can ask the clinic directly about current trial options or any research work tied to her practice.