Safety

New knee replacement surgery could reduce hospital stays

Ambulatory Safety Monitor, April 14, 2004

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A minimally invasive knee replacement surgery could cut hospital stays by 30% and also be performed in an outpatient setting.

The procedure, pioneered by Alfred Tria, MD, of Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Jersey uses a three-inch incision instead of the traditional 12-inch one and leaves most of the quadriceps muscle and tendons intact. The traditional procedure requires surgeons to cut the quadriceps and a tendon, which can cause patients pain during the rehabilitation process.

Tria hospitalizes his patients for two days after the surgery instead of the usual four for a traditional knee replacement. Richard Berger, MD, of Chicago's Rush University Medical Center is believed to be the first to perform outpatient knee replacement surgery using the minimally invasive technique.



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