Friday, April 19, 2024

A robot is now performing knee replacements at St. Joseph’s hospital

First Published:

A new technology that has never been used in Canada before is expected to be the cutting edge at St. Joseph’s hospital in Hamilton.

Canada’s first orthopaedic surgical robot, is a $2 million robot that will be performing knee replacements.

Working off a 3D image of a patients knee, surgeons plan the perfect place to insert the knee implant. This framework is then programmed into this robotic arm so that it knows the precise amount of bone that needs to be cut.

“I push the robotic arm but the robotic arm will only let me push it where it needs to cut the bone. If I try to push it beyond that it will push me back and if I push it even more it will stop.” Dr. Anthony Adili.

Making the cuts more accurately than if it were done by a surgeon.

The $1,800,000 robot was purchased with donated money. St. Joe’s says the new technology will first be used on a few hundred knee replacements patients to gather research, then the research of the new device will expand to hip replacements. The study is needed to know if the benefit of the new robot outweighs the cost of operating it.

St. Josephs healthcare says one in five Hamiltonians are affected by arthritis and the hospital performs about 600 knee and hip replacements every year.

 

The hospital is already using robots for operations of the lung, prostate, kidney, mouth and throat.

More Top News

Students, parents at Westdale school protest start time change

It's been two years since the start bell time changed from 8:35 a.m. to 8 a.m. at Westdale Secondary. A group of parents and...

Ontario’s Big City Mayors discuss housing, mental health and homelessness

Ontario's Big City Mayors held its annual general meeting in downtown Burlington on Friday, with Mayor Marianne Meed Ward chairing the event.  The meeting focused...

Evening weather forecast for April 19, 2024

Shelly Marriage breaks down the forecast for April 19, 2024 and the weekend ahead.

Sportsline: Allan Cup Challenge tournament director Don Robertson

VIDEO: Canada's oldest national hockey championship, the Allan Cup Challenge, begins Saturday in Dundas. On April 27, the final will be televised on CHCH...

Hamilton police report 26% increase in hate-related incidents in 2023

Hate in Hamilton is on the rise, according to figures pulled from the city's latest police report. On Friday, the force said it recorded 220...

Gas line struck after stolen car crashes into Hamilton home

A stolen pickup truck crashed into other vehicles then two houses in east Hamilton rupturing their natural gas lines early Friday. Police called on residents...