• SMILE AGAIN
    say GOOD BYE to pain
  • Life should not stop
    just because you have ARTHRITIS
  • Don't let shoulder
    PAIN keep you down
  • Get back
    in the game!
  • Get back
    in the race!

Computer Assisted Surgery

Computer navigation technique is the latest revolution in orthopaedic surgery. This technology is used for replacement of arthritic knee joints.

Computer navigation provides the surgeon with the real time 3-D images of the mapped patient’s affected joint and the surgical instruments during surgery. The data for the images is provided by the infrared sensors fixed to the bones of the joint and the surgical instruments. Their position is tracked by an infrared camera placed above the surgical table connected to the computer. The computer than generates the real time images with the help of the appropriate software to guide the surgeon to precisely resurface and cut the bones of the joint and fix the implant precisely & accurately according to the pre-operative surgical plan. Thus the surgery is done by the surgeon only. Computer navigation is just a tool to guide the surgeon and improve the outcome of the surgery. It cannot replace the skills of an experienced surgeon.

The life of the implant can be extended by precise alignment of the implant and this can be achieved by the use of computer navigation for total joint replacement surgery.

  • Royal Australasian College Of Surgeon
  •  Austrlian Orthopedic Association
  • The University Of Sydney
  • Nepan Private Hospspital
  • AO Trauma
  • Australian Medical Association
  • American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
  • Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada
  • Australian Society of Orthopaedic Surgeons
  • Sydney Adventist Hospital
  • St Lukes Care
  • North Shore Private Hospital
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