Hinckley Times

The rebuilding of broken bones is never a quick fix

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AS MOST of our clients will be all too aware The Fairfield surgical unit has been having a major refurbishm­ent.

No doubt many will also be familiar with the concept that whenever you have builders involved they are inevitably “behind schedule and over budget”.

We have been no exception to that “law of nature”.

Conversely, as a surgeon involved in the reconstruc­tion of shat- tered bones I find myself on the other side of that perspectiv­e.

Ginni, a 16-year-old cat, was presented at Fairfield with a badly broken femur (thigh bone).

His owner not unsurprisi­ngly enquired as to the likely costs involved in the repair.

The difficulty I have as a surgeon is that fundamenta­lly my patients heal themselves.

My involvemen­t is creating an environmen­t in which that pro- cess can occur.

Using pins and wire I hoped to provide the fracture with a sufficient period of stability to promote new bone production and stabilise the bone ends.

Clearly, with elderly patients the rate of recovery is slower and predicting when the repair is complete is not straightfo­rward.

I cannot lay blame with Ginni who was an exemplary patient nor his owner who did every- thing I asked.

I did however err on the side of caution before removing his intramedul­lary pin to reveal his beautiful repaired leg.

It was pointed out to me at that stage that I was “behind schedule and over budget”.

Fortunatel­y for me Ginni’s owner was a little more understand­ing than I had been! Terry Dunne BVMS, Cert SAO, MRCVS www.fairfieldv­ets.co.uk

 ??  ?? Ginni, an elderly cat who has recovered from a broken bone
Ginni, an elderly cat who has recovered from a broken bone
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