'Second line' ankle repairs in the making

Published: July 2, 2009 at 11:15 PM

ROSEMONT, Ill., July 2 (UPI) -- If at first an injured ankle does not heal, a U.S. surgeon says there are some new techniques that may help.

Dr. Matthew Mitchell, an orthopedic surgeon in Casper, Wyo., says most ankle injuries are successfully treated with traditional "first-line" therapies, but about one-fifth to one-quarter of people with ankle injuries may need additional "second-line" restorative treatment to heal successfully.

Mitchell is lead author of an article published in the Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons on several emerging techniques.

He suggests one of these -- a graft technique called matrix-induced autologous chondrocyte implantation, in which cartilage cells taken from the patient are used as seeds to grow more tissue in the lab on a special backing material or "matrix" -- benefits the patient because it is a second-line repair that may not always require an osteotomy or cutting of the tibia, the lower leg bone.

"You only need to make an incision to place the graft, which decreases the morbidity of the procedure quite a bit," Mitchell says in a statement.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
NBA: Los Angeles Lakers 108, Phoenix 88 (10 min)
NFL: Arizona 30, Minnesota 17 (30 min)
NBA: Miami 115, Sacramento 102 (43 min)
UPI Sports Calendar for Monday, Dec. 7 (50 min)
NHL: Ottawa 4, Anaheim 3 (SO)
COL BKB: Villanova 95, Maryland 86
NHL: Detroit 3, New York Rangers 1
fark
Gold E. Locks arrested for breaking into house
Photoshop this yawning young man
After closed meeting on openness, Obama talks up the downside of the left being right about looking...
U.S. Air Force ends ban on recruits with tattoos on their saluting arms, admitting yeah, they'll...
Some people lift huge weights. Some people pull trains with their teeth. And then there's this guy...
Photoshop this armor