Sar Ahmed, M.D.
Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon
Sar Ahmed, MD is a board-certified and fellowship-trained orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Ahmed has dual fellowship training from Cleveland Clinic in primary and revision hip and knee replacement/reconstruction as well as shoulder arthroscopy and replacements. In addition, he has extensive training and experience in level-one trauma as well.
Dr. Ahmed received his Bachelors of Science degree from University of Buffalo, where he graduated summa cum laude through the advanced honors program. He was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Chapter as well as the Golden Key National Honor Society. Dr. Ahmed completed his medical degree, General surgery internship and Orthopedic residency through SUNY Upstate Medical University at Syracuse.
In his free time Dr. Ahmed enjoys traveling and spending time with his wife and daughters. He enjoys reading and also leads an active life hiking, and participating in triathlons and long distance running.
Provider is now seeing patients at our North Scottsdale, Old Town Scottsdale and Arrowhead locations.
Sar Ahmed, M.D.
Work
Education
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Cleveland, OH
Shoulder/Elbow Fellowship. Joseph Iannotti, M.D, Chairman
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Cleveland, OH
Adult Reconstruction Fellowship. Wael Barsoum, M.D, Vice-Chairman
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Syracuse, NY
Orthopaedic Surgery Residency. Stephen A. Albanese, MD, Chairman
Department of General Surgery, Syracuse, NY
General Surgery Internship. Paul G. Cunningham, MD, FACS, Chairman
MD, May 2005
BS, Biology, magna cum laude
Advanced Honors Program
Research
Publications
Walker JB, Worhacz K, Auran RL, Kang P, Ahmed S. Outcomes After Implientation of an Outpatient Shoulder Arthroplasty Protocol. Submitted to JSES
Eyberg B, Chung A, Walker R, Ahmed S. A Case of Rapidly Destructive Osteoarthritis with Associated Acetabular Fracture, Treated with Total Hip Arthroplasty. Submitted to Journal of Hip Surgery.
Worhacz K, Jacofsky M, Jacofsky D, Ahmed S. Comparing the Efficacy of the Total Stabilizing and Posterior Stabilizing Knee Prostheses in Obese and Pre-Obese Fiales: A Retrospective Cohort Study. J Knee Surgery Jan 22, 2018. (Epub ahead of print) & MORE symposium abstract presentation
Olmscheid N, Chung A, Ahmed S. Parvimonas Micra and Propionibacterium Acnes Infection of a Total Knee Arthroplasty in a Patient with a History of Smoking and Periodontitis. Case Report Manuscript. Submitted to Journal of the American Acadiy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
Hustedt J, Ahmed S. Plesiomonas shigelloides periprosthetic knee infection after consumption of raw oysters. The American Journal of Orthopedics.E32-34, Jan/Feb 2017.
Hustedt J, Lara N, Bohl D, Ahmed S. National Trends in Acute Gastrointestinal Hiorrhage in Patients Undergoing Total Joint Arthroplasty in the United States. Submitted to Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American.
Sabry FY, Buller L, Ahmed S, Klika AK, Barsoum WK. Preoperative prediction of failure following two-stage revision for knee prosthetic joint infections. J Arthroplasty 29(1):115-21, Jan 2014
Skerrett, I.M., Kasperek, E., Cao, F.-L., Shin, J.H., Aronowitz, J., Ahmed, S., and Nicholson, B.J. Application of SCAM (Substituted Cysteine Accessibility Method) to Gap Junction Intercellular Channels. Cell Communication and Adhesion 8: 179-186, 2001.
Presentations
Orthopedic Grand Rounds, SUNY Upstate Medical University
Honors & Professional Organizations
Certifications
USMLE Step I, II & III passed
Personal
Hobbies include reading, racquetball, hiking, swimming, road-biking, mountain-biking, running (marathons, 50/100 mile ultramarathons), triathlons (full distance/Ironman), skiing/snowboarding and weightlifting. Fluent in Hindi & Urdu.
Articles
Osteoarthritis; Most Frequent Cause of Disability
Arthritis is the leading indication for joint replacement surgery. Patients who require surgical treatment for osteoarthritis of the hip have developed the condition naturally over time due to various risk factors; or, in an accelerated fashion, due to prior trauma, injuries, or infection. With rising life expectancy, it is estimated that the prevalence of hip osteoarthritis will continue to increase. The number of people older than age 65 is expected to increase from 37.1 million to 77.2 million by 2040.