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Expert list · Last reviewed April 17, 2026

Orthopaedic Surgeons Near Me in New York: Where to Start

Find top orthopaedic surgeons in New York for hip, knee, shoulder, sports injuries, and pediatric care at NYU Langone, HSS, and Lenox Hill.

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New York has a deep bench of orthopaedic surgeons whose research and clinical volume put them among the most experienced in the country. If you are searching for an orthopaedic surgeon near you in New York, here is a short list built from peer-reviewed publication records and hospital affiliations.

The surgeons below practice at NYU Langone, Lenox Hill Hospital, Hospital for Special Surgery, and affiliated teaching institutions. They cover the full range of adult and pediatric orthopaedic care: hip and knee replacement, shoulder surgery, sports medicine, trauma, and children's orthopaedics. Each one has shaped how surgeons elsewhere approach common injuries, from broken hips in older adults to ACL tears in teen athletes.

Joseph Zuckerman

Joseph Zuckerman, M.D.

Professor

NYU Langone Hospitals

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Dr. Zuckerman is a professor of orthopaedic surgery at NYU Langone Hospitals with a focus on shoulder replacement and hip fracture care. He treats adults with rotator cuff disease, arthritis, frozen shoulder, and broken hips, and he has led research that defined how these conditions are diagnosed across hospitals 12. His work on hip fractures in older adults, including a widely cited review in the New England Journal of Medicine, helped shape standard treatment for a fracture that roughly one in three adults over 65 will face after a fall 345.

Dr. Nicholas is an orthopaedic surgeon at Lenox Hill Hospital specializing in sports medicine. He treats shoulder, hip, knee, and ankle injuries in athletes of every level, from professional hockey players to high school football players and active adults with kneecap pain 6789. His research on preseason conditioning showed that a targeted adductor strengthening program sharply cut groin injuries in professional hockey players, and that finding now guides training rooms across pro sports 10.

Giles Scuderi

Giles Scuderi, M.D.

Adult Knee Reconstruction Fellowship Director at Lenox Hill Hospital

North Shore University Hospital

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Dr. Scuderi directs the adult knee reconstruction fellowship at Lenox Hill Hospital and practices across North Shore University Hospital and Long Island Jewish Medical Center. He performs knee replacement and revision knee surgery, including complex cases in younger, more active patients 11. He co-led development of the Knee Society Scoring System, the tool surgeons use worldwide to measure how a new knee actually performs for the person walking on it 12131415.

William Macaulay

William Macaulay, MD

Professor

NYU Langone Hospitals

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Dr. Macaulay is a professor of orthopaedic surgery at NYU Langone Hospitals and focuses on hip replacement, including surgery for hip fractures and advanced arthritis. He has studied what type of hip replacement works best after a broken hip, how surgical approach affects dislocation risk, and how much blood transfusion actually helps after hip surgery 16171819. His randomized trial comparing partial with total hip replacement for femoral neck fractures still informs how surgeons choose between the two in older adults 20.

Kenneth Egol

Kenneth Egol, M.D.

Professor

NYU Langone Hospitals

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Dr. Egol is a professor at NYU Langone Hospitals who specializes in orthopaedic trauma. His practice centers on difficult fractures, nonunions (bones that fail to heal), and infections around implants. He has written reference material on intramedullary nailing of broken leg bones 21 and led research on stress fractures of the hip, hip fracture outcomes across different patient groups, and whether older adults with wrist fractures do better with surgery or a cast 22232425.

Daniel Green

Daniel Green, MD

Chief of the Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery Service, Hospital for Special Surgery; Professor of Clinical Orthopaedic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Dr. Green is chief of pediatric orthopaedic surgery at Hospital for Special Surgery and a professor at Weill Cornell Medical College. He treats children and teen athletes with ACL tears, meniscus tears, unstable kneecaps, and growth-plate conditions like Osgood-Schlatter 262728. He helped develop an activity scale designed specifically for kids recovering from knee surgery and contributed to an international consensus on how to manage kneecap instability in young patients 2930.

What to look for in an orthopaedic surgeon

  • Board certification by the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery
  • Subspecialty training (fellowship) that matches your problem: joint replacement, sports medicine, trauma, spine, hand, foot and ankle, or pediatrics
  • Affiliation with a high-volume teaching hospital
  • Surgical volume for your specific procedure, not just orthopaedic surgery overall
  • Whether they perform the procedure often enough to be comfortable with rare complications
  • Insurance compatibility and whether they are accepting new patients

Questions to ask before your first appointment

  • How many of this specific procedure do you perform each year?
  • What nonsurgical options should I try first?
  • What is the realistic recovery timeline for someone my age and activity level?
  • What are the most common complications, and how often do they happen in your hands?
  • Will you or a fellow or physician assistant perform the surgery?
  • What happens if I am not satisfied with the result?

The bottom line

Start with a surgeon whose subspecialty matches your condition, not just a generalist. A hip fracture, an ACL tear in a 14-year-old, and a stiff shoulder are different problems that benefit from different training. If a surgeon on this list is not in your network or not accepting new patients, ask for a referral to a partner in the same fellowship-trained group. For second opinions on complex or revision surgery, a high-volume academic center in New York City is a reasonable next step.

Sources

  1. 1.
    Impact of Relational Coordination on Quality of Care, Postoperative Pain and Functioning, and Length of StayMedical Care, 2000. DOI
  2. 2.
    Hip FractureNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996. DOI
  3. 3.
    Quantifying success after total shoulder arthroplasty: the minimal clinically important differenceJournal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, 2017. DOI
  4. 4.
    Frozen shoulder: a consensus definitionJournal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, 2010. DOI
  5. 5.
    Mortality Risk After Hip FractureJournal of Orthopaedic Trauma, 2003. DOI
  6. 6.
    The Association of Hip Strength and Flexibility with the Incidence of Adductor Muscle Strains in Professional Ice Hockey PlayersThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2001. DOI
  7. 7.
    Quantification of Posterior Capsule Tightness and Motion Loss in Patients with Shoulder ImpingementThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2000. DOI
  8. 8.
    Risk Factors for Noncontact Ankle Sprains in High School Football PlayersThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2005. DOI
  9. 9.
    The Role of Hip Muscle Function in the Treatment of Patellofemoral Pain SyndromeThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2005. DOI
  10. 10.
    The Effectiveness of a Preseason Exercise Program to Prevent Adductor Muscle Strains in Professional Ice Hockey PlayersThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2002. DOI
  11. 11.
    The New Knee Society Knee Scoring SystemClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 2011. DOI
  12. 12.
    Survivorship of Cemented Total Knee ArthroplastyClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1997. DOI
  13. 13.
    Total Knee Replacement in Young, Active Patients. Long-Term Follow-up and Functional Outcome*Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1997. DOI
  14. 14.
    Rotational Landmarks and Sizing of the Distal Femur in Total Knee ArthroplastyClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1996. DOI
  15. 15.
    Development of a New Knee Society Scoring SystemClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 2011. DOI
  16. 16.
    Liberal or Restrictive Transfusion in High-Risk Patients after Hip SurgeryNew England Journal of Medicine, 2011. DOI
  17. 17.
    Does Surgical Approach Affect Total Hip Arthroplasty Dislocation Rates?Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 2006. DOI
  18. 18.
    Dislocation After Total Hip ArthroplastyJournal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 2004. DOI
  19. 19.
    Prospective Randomized Clinical Trial Comparing Hemiarthroplasty to Total Hip Arthroplasty in the Treatment of Displaced Femoral Neck FracturesThe Journal of Arthroplasty, 2008. DOI
  20. 20.
    Tip-apex distance of intramedullary devices as a predictor of cut-out failure in the treatment of peritrochanteric elderly hip fracturesInternational Orthopaedics, 2009. DOI
  21. 21.
    2018 International Consensus Meeting on Musculoskeletal Infection: Research Priorities from the General Assembly QuestionsJournal of Orthopaedic Research®, 2019. DOI
  22. 22.
    Intramedullary Nailing of the Lower Extremity: Biomechanics and BiologyJournal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, 2007. DOI
  23. 23.
    Stress Fractures of the Femoral NeckClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1998. DOI
  24. 24.
    The Association of Race, Gender, and Comorbidity With Mortality and Function After Hip FractureThe Journals of Gerontology Series A, 2008. DOI
  25. 25.
    Distal Radial Fractures in the Elderly: Operative Compared with Nonoperative TreatmentJournal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 2010. DOI
  26. 26.
    20 Years of Pediatric Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction in New York StateThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2014. DOI
  27. 27.
    Osgood Schlatter syndromeCurrent Opinion in Pediatrics, 2007. DOI
  28. 28.
    Arthroscopic Treatment of Symptomatic Discoid Meniscus in Children: Classification, Technique, and ResultsArthroscopy The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery, 2007. DOI
  29. 29.
    Development and Validation of a Pediatric Sports Activity Rating ScaleThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2013. DOI
  30. 30.
    Patellar Instability Management: A Survey of the International Patellofemoral Study GroupThe American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2017. DOI

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