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Arthritis: Personalized Knee Implant Offers Relief
Reported April 30, 2010
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- It's a problem that plagues
more than 21 million Americans: Osteoarthritis causes cartilage in the
joints to break down. When it hits the knees, walking --even standing -- is
painful. For the majority of patients, knee replacements are the best
option, but the implants are one size fits all. A new personalized approach
is helping one grandmother keep up with her busy life.
A year ago, keeping up with her grandson would have been impossible for Irma
Minott.
"I could not stand more than four hours on my leg, and it was very painful,"
Minott told Ivanhoe.
Osteoarthritis in her knee made it difficult to keep up.
"Most of the time, I had to sit down, take care of him while I'm sitting
down," Minott said.
"Once you start to get a knee that's bowlegged or knock-kneed, then the
pressures become abnormally high on one side of the joint or the other, and
the cartilage wears out," John L. Stanton, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon at
The Bone & Joint Group in Clarksville, Tenn., explained to Ivanhoe.
When injections and surgery didn't help, Dr. Stanton recommended a new
personalized knee replacement.
"So the implant is not just close to fitting or gender specific, but it is
patient specific," Dr. Stanton said.
A CT scan of Minott's knee was used to create a 3-D computer model. Then the
doctor made plastic implants identical to her knee. Even the surgical
instruments were tailored to fit her body.
"These implants really cover the bone nicely and distribute the weight, as
well, so you have good coverage of the bone, and this again should give a
long-lasting result," Dr. Stanton explained.
For Minott, the knee replacement was a success. Two days after surgery, she
was back walking. Seven months later?
"I could even run right behind him, which to me was amazing because I
couldn't do that," Minott said.
A woman who doesn't take one moment -- or movement -- for granted.
The new implant is used only for partial knee replacements. Dr. Stanton says
since the procedure requires very little bone to be removed and leaves
ligaments intact, it makes it much easier to perform a total knee
replacement down the road. |