Scottish Daily Mail

Robot hip replacemen­t gets you home and walking the SAME DAY

- By ADRIAN MONTI

JUST a few months ago, J a mes Fr a n k l i n was struggling to do everyday tasks because of constant pain in both of his hips. The pain that had built up over five years had become so severe that getting up from his office chair, or carrying shopping, would leave him wincing with agony. Even what should have been a ten-minute stroll to the supermarke­t took half an hour, and over-the-counter painkiller­s had little effect.

‘It got to the stage where the pain was 24/7,’ says James, 60, who works in telecommun­ications and lives in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham, with his wife Sharon. ‘At night, I could feel the pain as I lay still in bed. I could never get comfortabl­e and it was getting me down.’

Like millions of people in the UK, James had osteoarthr­itis in his hips, where the spongy cartilage covering the joints becomes damaged and leads to pain, swelling and difficulty moving, and he was told both hips needed replacing.

Now following two hip replacemen­ts, James’s agony is becoming a distant memory. But what is more remarkable is that James was up walking and ready to be discharged just five-and-a-half hours after arriving at the hospital — all thanks to his surgery being carried out, in part at least, by a robot.

According to James Webb, a consultant orthopaedi­c surgeon who carried out the operations on James’s hips, this high-tech technique — where surgery is guided by a robotic arm — is a ‘game changer’ for not just hip, but knee replacemen­ts, too.

‘When I started my surgical training in the Nineties, it was usual for a hip replacemen­t patient to be in bed for days and stay in hospital for a week or more,’ says Mr Webb, who works at Tees Valley Hospital in Middlesbro­ugh and BMI Woodlands Hospital in Darlington. ‘Then there were six to eight weeks of athome recovery, plus physiother­apy to get full movement back again.

‘Now, with robotic assistance, the operation i s much more accurate and refined, so patients can be walking in about two hours and back home soon after on the same day. They can even be driving within a week and resume their active, normal lives. It’s a game For changer for patients.’

some years, surgical robots have been used to carry out cardiac, gastrointe­stinal and gynaecolog­ical operations, as well as in prostate and bladder cancers.

The approach is not without controvers­y and risks, not least because they require highly specialise­d training for the surgeon and can be prone to electrical faults.

In 2015, a 69-year-old man died while having a heart operation, where a surgeon was using a robot, called Da Vinci, to repair a valve. It led to a suspension of cardiac surgery at the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle.

The use of robotic assistance in joint-replacemen­t surgery is a relatively new innovation.

Traditiona­lly, an arthritic hip is treated with painkiller­s and antiinflam­matories, followed by physiother­apy to mobilise the stiff joint, and possibly a steroid injection.

Surgery is an option in severe cases, where the damaged joint is removed and replaced with an artificial one. Each year, more than 100,000 patients have their hip replaced in the UK. It takes away pain in 85 per cent of cases and lasts at least 15 years.

However, if the fit of the artificial joint is even slightly off, it can lead to patients having legs of different lengths, poor muscle function, or a joint that easily dislocates.

Using robots allows greater precision — and this accuracy means less damage to surroundin­g muscle and nerves, which allows for quicker recovery times.

James was offered the chance to have both hips replaced using the Stryker Mako robot, a device about the size of a small fridge, which has a mechanical arm attached to it that guides the surgeon during the procedure.

As the £1 million technology is relatively new, just a few NHS hospitals — in Birmingham, Exeter and Portsmouth — are using it, along with around a dozen private hospitals across the country. The robot is used both before and during the operation, which costs £13,500 privately for each hip.

Before the procedure, a CT scan is taken of the hip, which the Mako software uses to build a detailed, 3D model of t he j oint and surroundin­g area. This shows the surgeon how much bone to remove, the cuts to make into the d a maged joint, t he size of t he implant to use and precisely where it should be placed (although the same type of implant is used as with convention­al surgery).

The data is then uploaded to a computer which guides the robotic arm during surgery.

The idea is that it means the implant will fit perfectly, with less of the healthy tissue and bone being damaged during t he operation, which can often occur in traditiona­l surgery.

The operation, which takes roughly the same time as traditiona­l surgery — around 40 minutes for a hip replacemen­t and 50 minutes for a knee replacemen­t — can be carried out using a spinal anaestheti­c rather than a general anaestheti­c, which helps to cut the recovery time, too.

James used his work medical insurance to have the operations done privately.

He had his right hip replaced in March, and the left in September — both with the Mako robot. It was the promise of a rapid recovery which appealed to him.

The procedure starts with the surgeon making a 10 cm vertical incision (smaller than with traditiona­l surgery) in the side of the hip. The hip joint is dislocated and the femoral head, the ball part of the ball-andsocket j oint, is removed from the socket and cut off with a saw on the robot’s arm, with any r emaining cartilage i nside the socket cleared away by the robot, too.

Informatio­n about the procedure is di s pl a y e d on a screen throughout, allowing the surgeon to check the robot is cutting the bone as planned. The new implant is then guided into place by the robot, making sure it is correctly aligned.

‘ Traditiona­lly i t would be a surgeon’s experience and expertise that would decide where to make the cuts when carrying out this surgery and which size implant to use,’ says Mr Webb.

‘But with this approach all the cuts are already worked out and programmed into the robot’s arm. Each cut will be within 1 mm of accuracy and it is programmed to stop instantly if it veers away by only a fraction.’

Despite the robot doing the work, the surgeon remains in control of the procedure the whole time, he says. ‘I still make the incision and expose the joint, but use the robot as a precise tool to prepare the bone and align the correct implant,’ says Mr Webb.

‘All hip replacemen­t surgery carries the risk of infection, bleeding, blood clots, dislocatio­n of the new joint and a leg length difference — but the Mako aims to reduce these as the procedure is more precise — in particular, the risks of dislocatio­n and difference in leg length.’

research, including a study of 80 patients published in The Bone and Joint Journal in 2018, shows patients who have this robot surgery suffer less post- operative pain and have a much faster recovery — usually about two weeks compared to six with the convention­al method. Most patients are out of hospital within 24 hours, instead of three or four nights.

However, whether a total hip replacemen­t using a robot will last longer than the traditiona­l method is not yet known.

‘If it [joints via robotic surgery] does last longer, it may be more suited to younger patients, who tend to be more active,’ says Professor J ohn Skinner, a consultant orthopaedi­c surgeon at the royal National orthopaedi­c Hospital in Stanmore.

James had his operations with a spinal anaestheti­c, which numbs the body from the naval down.

While James had some pain and soreness in the days after the operation, he is keeping active to avoid the joint becoming stiff.

The first hip took about three months to feel completely painfree after surgery and he expects the same will happen with the left one, too.

‘For the first time in years I don’t worry about my hips and everything being a struggle,’ he says.

 ??  ?? Under the knife: James Franklin praised the robot-led surgery
Under the knife: James Franklin praised the robot-led surgery
 ?? Pictures: GETTY/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY/ WILL WALKER/NORTH NEWS ??
Pictures: GETTY/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY/ WILL WALKER/NORTH NEWS

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