Intellijoint HIP supports all surgical approaches, including the direct anterior approach, which is a minimally invasive, muscle-sparing surgery that accesses the hip joint from the front of the body.1 It involves accessing the joint without detaching muscles or tendons, instead pulling them aside. This approach aims to reduce post-operative pain and allow for quicker recovery and return to activity with minimal scarring. Patients who had a direct anterior surgery were able to walk more in the first two days after the surgery, had significantly less pain the day after, and were discharged earlier from the hospital. 2
“Out of my four operations, I had the fastest recovery experience for my hip surgery, and I was able to walk up and down 20 stairs after the first day,” says Terry Yandt, a patient for whom Intellijoint HIP navigation greatly improved their health outcomes. “The technology is easy and efficient, and I felt significantly less pain. Everyone deserves to leave the hospital feeling pain-free.”
Intellijoint HIP supports a surgeon’s ability to perform the direct anterior approach by providing real-time feedback during the surgery. Intellijoint HIP has been shown to help guide surgeons to reduce leg length discrepancies and hit significantly more precise cup-position targets during surgery than when they used intraoperative X-ray imaging for guidance during surgery.3
WRHN and Intellijoint Surgical first began working together in 2022 following a $1 million investment by the Government of Ontario in a research study to measure the success of their intraoperative navigation solution and better understand the benefit of navigation technology for patients across Ontario. The hip replacement study was a success with surgeons performing nearly 200 hip replacement surgeries using Intellijoint HIP navigation. “Because of this success, we’re extremely excited to use this technology with more patients at WRHN,” says Dr. Matthew Snider, WRHN orthopedic surgeon. “We expect improved long-term benefits for patients with the Intellijoint navigation technology.”
To align efforts to increase the readiness of our local health-care system to support research and innovation, WRHN continues to build partnerships with medical innovators at Intellijoint and the University of Waterloo as part of the CareNext Innovation Program. “Not only is this a great opportunity to celebrate a partnership with the newly merged WRHN, but also to celebrate the local adoption of a novel surgical technology that was invented, designed and developed right here in Kitchener-Waterloo,” says Armen Bakirtzian, Co-founder and CEO of Intellijoint Surgical.