Adena First in Region to Offer Robot-assisted Orthopedic Surgery
Adena Health System is now the only hospital in south central Ohio to offer patients a robot-assisted orthopedic surgery option. A new set of Stryker’s Mako Systems is giving Adena’s orthopedic surgeons the option to offer robot-assisted total knee, partial knee and total hip replacements.
The Mako System is highly-advanced robotic technology that transforms how joint replacement surgery is performed. It gives surgeons and patients a more predictable joint replacement experience, enabling the surgeon to create a personalized surgical plan, based on the patient’s unique anatomy. The Mako System also allows physicians to virtually modify the plan during surgery and assists the surgeon with bone cuts.
In a robotic-arm assisted partial knee procedure, the doctor can selectively target only the part of the knee that is damaged by osteoarthritis. This allows the surgeon to resurface the diseased portion of the knee, while sparing the healthy bone and ligaments surrounding the joint. Studies have shown robotic-arm assisted partial knee replacement to be two to three times more accurate than manual partial knee replacement procedures.
As baby boomers continue to age, the demand for joint replacement is expected to rise over the next decade. By 2030, total knee replacements in the U.S. are expected to increase by 673 percent, while primary total hip replacements are estimated to increase by 174 percent.
For more information on Adena’s Mako robot-assisted orthopedic surgery program, visit Orthopedics.