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"I got more energy right away. My hands and feet are warm now. They haven't been for years!"
- Ms Denise Tomkins, Canada.
"This is fantastic. As each day progresses after the procedure, I feel better and better."
- Mr. Paul Stock, Canada.
"My energy levels have increased, there is a return of power to my hands and am happy at the fatigue levels going way down".
- Ms May Feitsma, Canada.
"At first I thought I was going to have to be happy with warm hands,feet and a new clarity of mind. I feel a little bit more like my old self every day. Yesterday was special because I woke up and headed in to the bathroom as usual and when I came out I was walking without even thinking about it. I have been sleeping better than I have in years and want to thank you, Dr. Balaji and Swathi for everything you’ve done for me. Right now I’m planting my vegetable garden and it can’t be put off for even one more day so I’ll get back to this."
- D.T, Summerland, BC
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Resorbable screws used for the first time in India at Apollo Hospitals Chennai to correct congenital spine problem of a six-year-old child from Tanzania |
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Six-year-old Maureen Richard Shirima will now be able to run and jump, like other students in her class in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Clutching a yellow teddy bear, she recalled “Sometimes when I came back to class [after playing] I would be sick.” It would hurt “when I jump, when I run.”
Until a month ago the child suffered excruciating back pain, caused by a congenital anomaly of the lower spine and the spinal cord. Maureen’s problem was that she had a low-lying spinal cord which was tethered to a benign tumour. A lower vertebra had broken causing back ache.
Apollo Hospital senior consultant and spine surgeon Sajan K. Hegde said here on Tuesday that a bone graft was taken from the child and used to set the fractured bone and resorbable screws helped to keep the bones in place. He said resorbable screws were in use for sometime now across the world but this was the first time it was being used in India to correct such rare problems of the lower spine.
Normally, metal implants and screws are used to set bones and another surgery is required to remove them once the bones set.
In patients where the implants were not removed, the possibility of going for an MRI scan, if needed, was ruled out. Dr. Hegde said resorbable screws, now widely used for setting bones in other parts of the body, was chosen considering the patient’s age.
The child was a beneficiary of collaboration between the Tanzanian Health Ministry and hospitals in India. The cost of her surgery was borne by the Tanzanian government, said a representative of the Tanzanian High Commission. |
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