Orthopaedic
Surgery Advances Encouraging
Every year in the US, more than 325,000 aching knees and
more than 172,000 painful hips must be replaced as age, arthritis, and injuries
take their toll.
Advances in orthopaedics, however, also mean there is less
hospitalization and a quicker recovery time for joint-replacement patients
because more surgeons are performing what are known as "minimally invasive" or "less
invasive" procedures.
While the newer techniques may not work for everyone, they
can be a big plus for some, especially when it is difficult to take a lot of
time off from work to recover from surgery.
Today, joint-replacement surgery is classified as "conventional," "less
invasive," or "minimally invasive," according to Dr. Jay Mabrey, chief of orthopaedic
surgery at Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas.
The minimally invasive procedures involve the smallest surgical
incisions; the conventional, the largest.
Minimally invasive surgeries are performed with specially
designed, smaller surgical instruments, and the instruments can also be used
for the less invasive surgeries.
Surgeons typically insert two small tubes into the incision
site. One tube contains a fiberoptic camera and a light source; the other usually
contains miniaturized surgical instruments. The physicians watch a TV monitor
to guide them during the operation.
Total hip replacement involves removing the head of the
thighbone. The ball-and-socket mechanism of the hip is then replaced with artificial
implants. Knee replacement involves resurfacing the worn-out surfaces of the
knee and replacing the cartilage with metal and plastic, Dr. Mabrey says.
"Most surgeons have gone to a smaller incision," Dr. Mabrey
remarks, "and a smaller group of them have gone to minimally invasive techniques."
In traditional hip replacement surgery, for instance, the
incision is about 12 to 14 inches in length, he says, and the operation involves
a significant amount of blood loss. In less invasive techniques, the incision
can be 4 to 8 inches, and in minimally invasive procedures, about 4 inches,
he notes.
It is not just the incision size that has changed in joint
replacement surgery, Dr. Mabrey continues. "Newer types of anesthesia techniques
allow some patients to get out of the hospital within 24 to 36 hours [after
surgery]." Because the incision is smaller, the trauma to muscles and tissues
is less, and thus recovery time is faster.
With minimally invasive surgeries, some patients go back
to work in as little as 10 days to two weeks, says Dr. Mack Lancaster, an orthopaedic
surgeon at Baylor who does minimally invasive techniques in about 10 percent
of his joint replacement patients.
With less invasive techniques, the back-to-work timetable
tends to be three to four weeks. With conventional surgery, it is six weeks
or more, he says.
Both Drs. Lancaster and Mabrey acknowledge that there are
downsides to minimal incision surgery.
"There is a much smaller surgical field," Dr. Mabrey says. "So
instead of being able to see everything, such as alignment of the implant,
the actual surgery is not done under direct vision."
And a minimal incision operation, Dr. Mabrey explains, "almost
always increases the length of the surgery time."
Dr. Lancaster says he does not recommend minimal incision
surgery unless it is crucial for the patient to get back to normal functioning,
such as their job, quickly.
The best candidates for minimally invasive surgery, Dr.
Lancaster says, are otherwise healthy people of average body weight.
Overweight individuals are not good candidates for minimal
incision surgery in hip replacement, Dr. Mabrey notes, because "so much fat
overlies the hip, it makes it difficult to see what you are doing."
Older patients who have more osteoporosis and are more likely
to fracture are not good candidates for minimally invasive techniques either,
Dr. Mabrey says.
Always consult your physician for more information.
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