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Back On Track - Pauline Barker's
Story
Before Pauline Barker’s knee replacement surgery in
January, the 66-year-old retired elementary school teacher had stopped
doing many of the things she loved, such as taking her rambunctious dog
Barclay for walks in her south-Springfield neighborhood, because the
arthritic pain in her knee had become unbearable.
“I taught school for 37 years and was on my feet a lot. I started having
problems with my right knee about eight or nine years ago and it got worse
and worse as time went on. Eventually, I was walking with a crutch and
knew that I needed surgery,” Barker says. “Now the pain is gone and I’m
doing everything I was doing before, like shopping, traveling and walking
Barclay.”
Thanks to a minimally invasive approach to knee replacement surgery,
Barker was walking without crutches or a walker within a week after her
surgery.
“A friend loaned me a walker to use after I came home from the hospital,
and I only used it a few times,” Barker says. “I didn’t even use it when I
went to my first post-surgery checkup with Dr. Nachtigal.”
St. John’s orthopedist Michael Nachtigal, M.D., performed Barker’s
surgery. He says the minimally invasive approach to total knee replacement
surgery involves new techniques and equipment that minimize the
interruption and dissection of neurovascular tissues, muscles, tendons and
ligaments. Which results in a shorter hospital stay and recovery time for
patients.
“Patients who have this procedure also have less pain, require less
medication, spend less time on crutches post-op and have a smaller scar
because of the smaller incision,” Dr. Nachtigal says. “The key to this surgery
being minimally invasive is not necessarily the smaller incision, but the
reduced trauma to the tissues around the knee.”
Approximately 300,000 total knee replacement surgeries are
performed each year in the United States. Most total knee replacement
surgeries are the result of debilitating arthritic conditions such as
rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis.
“We have used this technique at St. John’s since 2003. I’ve
performed it in 75 knee replacements,” Dr. Nachtigal says. “The minimally
invasive approach will eventually be used in the majority of total knee
replacements.”
This approach isn’t appropriate for every total knee replacement
patient, however. Dr. Nachtigal adds it may not be available to patients who
are obese, have had previous incisions around the knee or have a serious
medical condition or severe leg deformities.
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