Healthcare Breakthrough: New Collagen Gel Saves Leg From Amputation

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13th February 2010, 07:16am - Views: 716






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MEDIA RELEASE PR38339


Healthcare Breakthrough: New Collagen Gel Saves Leg From Amputation


LONDON, Feb. 12 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --



    Dr Ananthram Shetty, orthopaedic surgeon based in England, has recently

performed a world's first to save a climbers leg using a ground-breaking

technique combining collagen gel and stem cells to fuse bone together.


    Mr Shetty recently used the new technique on Andrew Kent from Gillingham,

Kent, after he badly broke his leg and traditional surgery failed. For the

first time ever doctors used stem cells to heal bones in a technique that

could revolutionise orthopaedic operations.


    Initially Mr Kent had been warned he faced amputation when a large

boulder fell on his right leg, breaking it in five places in April 2009. His

tibia had broken through the skin above his ankle. He was taken to the

Cumberland Infirmary in Carlisle, where he underwent three operations to pin

his bones back together. But his wound became seriously infected and he was

transferred to the Spire Alexandra Hospital, Kent. Surgeons warned that he

was likely to lose his leg unless they tried the new procedure.


    "Receiving that news is devastating," Mr Kent said. "But I'm now

delighted. I can wiggle my toes and the prognosis is encouraging."


    Mr Shetty removed stem cells from Mr Kent's hip bone-marrow. These were

mixed with the collagen gel called Surgifill to make a paste, which was

smeared into the fractures. They finally fixed his leg in a metal cage to

gently squeeze the bones together. The cage was removed in December, six

months after the Surgifill procedure.


    Mr Shetty explains "This is an amazing technique with remarkable results.

I was able to put my whole body weight on his leg and the bones remained

solid."


    Surgifill and Cartifill, a gel procedure used to repair knee cartilage,

were developed by orthopaedic surgeon Professor Seok-jung Kim, Director of

RMS (Regenerative Medical System) a South Korean bio-medical company, in

partnership with the UK's Spire Healthcare, where Mr Shetty predominately

operates.


    Dr Kim, a recognised pioneer in the biotech field, says "This is a very

exciting advancement in surgery as early results indicate Cartifill may be

extremely beneficial, particularly for knee surgery as Cartifill is extremely

beneficial to patients with cartilage damage to the knee, especially patella

(knee cap)."


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    Mr Shetty, Senior Lecturer at King's College, London is the only surgeon

worldwide trained to carry out the Surgifill and Cartifill procedures. "I see

huge potential for these techniques and I hope to be able to perform this

operation in India on a regular basis. The gel holds the stem cells against

the bone to form new cartilage. Ten patients have been treated so far in

Britain with an 80% success rate. The technique costs far less than

alternative techniques making it far more accessible for people in India," Mr

Shetty said.


    The minimally-invasive cartilage technique is a one stage day case

procedure, with a recovery time of up to six weeks, compared to alternative

treatments which generally need two stage surgery three days in hospital and

minimum twelve to fourteen week recovery.


    The Shetty-Kim technique has been hailed as one of the surgical advances

of the decade and already Mr Shetty has received enquiries from around the

world. This technique will be available in Mangalore and Bangalore soon.


    Photos available


    




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    Source: Spire Healthcare



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