Hospital for Special Surgery Surgeons Now Treating Ankle Injuries With Stem Cells

Orthopedic Sports Medicine

S. Robert Rozbruch, MD, a physician with the Hospital for Special Surgery, is performing a relatively new procedure where he injects stem cells into a patient's ankle to heal cartilage damage, according to a hospital news release.

Instead of performing a fusion to relieve pain in patients with a lack of cartilage between the subtalar joint in the ankle, Dr. Rozbruch implants a fixator for three months that pulls apart the joint. After three months, he injects stem cells into the newly created four-millimeter space where cartilage will regenerate.

The cartilage is expected to regenerate for years after the procedure. However, the patient is still able to have a fusion after receiving the stem cell injection.

Read the HHS release on using stem cells for ankle injuries.

Read other coverage on stem cells in orthopedics:

- Texas Spine Surgeon Performs Stem Cell Transplantation for Disc Degeneration

- OrthoPathways Group Announces Device for Biologic Orthopedic Surgery


- First Embryonic Stem Cell Treatment in a Human Used to Treat Spinal Cord Injury

Copyright © 2024 Becker's Healthcare. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy. Linking and Reprinting Policy.

 

Featured Webinars

Featured Whitepapers

Most Read - Sports Medicine