| AVN by Dr. Vijay Bose |
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Dr. Bose on what he does unique for his AVN cases. As of May 2007 Dr. Bose was approaching 400 AVN cases with a .5% or less than ½ of 1% failure rate, some patients are now over the 7 year mark. Here is a direct quote from him on why he feels they are achieving so much success in AVN cases. Dr. Vijay Bose: "The longest followup has been 7&1/2 yrs and a lot of patients have crossed 5 yrs. I am not the only one who is having a good result with AVN. Prof. Yoo from korea has not had a single failure yet for AVN resurfacing. The same goes for Dr. Sugano from Osaka, japan. The 3 of us together have done more than 1,000 resurfacings for AVN. AVN is much more common in Asia when compared to the rest of the world. Derek Mcminn has a 10% failure rate for AVN when compared to 1% for osteoarthritis. The Australian jnt replacement registry also shows a slightly higher failure rate for AVN than for OA among the Australian surgeons. In my opinion, I attribute the following reasons for the disparity in outcomes in Asia when compared to the rest of the world.
With best regards, Vijay bose, chennai Tony has informed me about the AVN discussion currently on surfacehippy. I have given the explanation of how a resurfacing works in AVN. I must apologize that it is long- winded and a little technical. However with the best of my efforts i could not make it any easier as it a complex concept to explain. I have now done about 185 resurfacings for AVN cases over a 5 year period with many patients crossing the 4 yrs mark. It is interesting to note there has not been a collapse or fracture neck of femur even in a single patient. It is wrong to think that the AVN continues forever in the femoral head. AVN is a one time event in which a strikingly similar sector of necrosis occurs in most femoral heads (anteo supero lateral part.) due to blockage of presumably the same vessel in all patients. This sets off a series of changes which are is marked by sectoral collapse. This is primary collapse of AVN and most patients are likely to develop it. Any kind of core decompression / bone grafting is a surgical attempt at preventing /postponing this event. These joint salvage procedures (according to literature) achieves their goal in about 30 - 50% of cases. The rest of the collapse (which at times is confused with primary AVN collapse) even by medical personnel is actually secondary mechanical collapse and this occurs because of 3 factors.
Please read on if you are a medical personnel. Please feel free to write to my e-mail add This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it if you have any specific queries. I would be glad to address them. Vijay Bose, Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon, Chennai |
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