The Asian Age

Elderly woman gets a ‘golden’ knee after surgery at AIIMS

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New Delhi, May 19: A 60year-old woman’s problem knee has been replaced with what what doctors call a golden knee at the All India Instititut­e of Medical Sciences (AIIMS).

The Gold Knee Replacemen­t surgery was conducted at AIIMS on Wednesday.

“There is no gold in the implant but it is golden in colour. It is actually colbalt chromium with seven layers of special coatings which act as a barrier between the skin and the metal which ward off allergies and infection,” Dr Rajesh Malhotra, head of the department of Orthopaedi­cs at AIIMS and chief of its Trauma Centre, said.

The patient, who suffered from acute osteoarthr­itis, had undergone a convention­al knee replacemen­t surgery in 2015.

She had difficulty walking, and had come to AIIMS with severe pain and pus oozing out from an infected knee.

The implant had also loosened because of which her knees were not able to bear her body weight, he said. The doctors first removed the old implant and treated the infection using antibiotic­s and then implanted the golden knee.

Cobalt chromium and titanium are among the most commonly used metals and alloys in implants. He said many people had allergic reactions to the various metals used in convention­al joint implants, which could also lead to infection.

Cobalt chromium impants also have nickel in them which can cause health problems such as toxicity.

“Gold knee is one of the best implants as its wear and tear is very low and it also prevents any allergic reaction,” he said.

It was also capable of taking on extra weight, he said.

“It can withstand corrosive environmen­t strains that all artificial knees are exposed to,” he said.

The Gold Knee Replacemen­t surgery is about three times more expensive than the convention­al one which at AIIMS costs about `1.5 lakh.

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