News

Paula Daoust, 68, is an avid runner and has been able to get back to doing what she loves after having a partial knee replacement surgery. At age 68, Paula Daoust is an avid runner. She’s run ...
Your knee joint has three major compartments. Any of these compartments can experience wear and tear that leads to knee pain: Inside (medial) compartment Outside (lateral) compartment Front ...
Partial knee replacement — also called unicondylar replacement — wasn’t commonly performed in the past because of the difficulty in accurately matching the resurfaced parts to the uninjured ...
The surgeon believes that partial knee replacement is the right format for the ASC and the robotic technology allows for the precision he needs in this type of procedure. Therefore, it was an ...
Partial knee replacement is a good option for patients experiencing severe knee pain or stiffness resulting from degenerative joint disease (including osteoarthritis, traumatic arthritis, or ...
Purpose For patients with end-stage knee osteoarthritis, joint replacement is a widely used and successful operation to help improve quality-of-life when non-operative measures have failed. For a ...
Even for the folks who have reached that bone-on-bone stage, they may be eligible for a partial knee replacement, where only the worn-out part of the knee is replaced, said Stone.
Lucknow: Doctors at KGMU's department of orthopaedics successfully performed a partial knee replacement using the microplasty ...
Paula Daoust’s surgeon used a robotic arm to perform a partial knee replacement after she was experiencing persistent knee pain. Now she’s back to adding to her total of 150 lifetime half ...
Their research articles highlight that partial knee replacement could be good enough for many Indians. The knee has three compartments: the medial (34%), lateral (33%), and patellofemoral (33%).
Author: KENS Staff Published: 11:08 AM CST December 15, 2009 Updated: 11:08 AM CST December 15, 2009 ...
The approval is based on safety and effectiveness data from an Investigational Device Exemption (“IDE”) study and non-clinical testing for cementless partial knee replacement (“PKR”).