Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,505,384 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

`Most Painful' Sports-Injury Surgery Tamed with High-Tech Pain Pump.


SARASOTA, Fla. & SALT LAKE CITY -- Rotator Cuff rotator cuff
n.
A set of muscles and tendons that secures the arm to the shoulder joint and permits rotation of the arm. Also called musculotendinous cuff.
 Patients Remain Pain-Free and Recover at Home Using State-of-the-Art ambIT Medical Infusion Pump infusion pump A device designed to deliver drugs and/or 'biologicals', at low doses and at a constant or controllable rate; ↑ rates of delivery in such devices may be associated with local hemolysis, compromising the potential benefits of a calibrated delivery ; Professional and Amateur Athletes Benefit from Latest Anesthetic Technique

Sarasota attorney J. Allen Bobo is a self-professed gym rat and until recently he believed the locker-room lore that surgical repair of the shoulder's rotator cuff is one of the most painful operations you can experience. But when Bobo underwent the procedure this year he found, "My rotator cuff surgery was less painful than most dental work. I had no pain following the surgery. In fact, the day after surgery, my shoulder hurt less than the day before surgery."

What makes pain-free surgical recovery practical for both professional and amateur athletes today is a new generation of innovative, microchip-controlled pain pumps made by Sorenson Medical in Salt Lake City. An anesthesiologist Anesthesiologist
A medical specialist who administers an anesthetic to a patient before he is treated.

Mentioned in: Anesthesia, General, Appendectomy, Parathyroidectomy

anesthesiologist
 connects one of these medical infusion pumps to a precisely placed catheter, or thin tube, that bathes the nerves at the source of the pain with a mild anesthetic, the type a dentist uses. These ambIT pain pumps provide a continuous drip of anesthetic exactly where needed, which is much more effective than swallowing pain pills because the pain-killing effect of a narcotic pill peaks and wears off, causing pain to come and go. In addition, narcotic pills may cause nausea, vomiting, constipation and drowsiness drows·i·ness
n.
A state of impaired awareness associated with a desire or inclination to sleep. Also called hypnesthesia.


drowsiness Medtalk Semiconsciousness; grogginess, sleepiness
 -- and they include a risk of addiction.

The new technique, continuous peripheral nerve block anesthesia nerve block anesthesia
n.
Conduction anesthesia in which a local anesthetic is injected about the peripheral nerves.
, is just now coming into mainstream use but has been available for a couple of years. "We have been operating on professional athletes using it," said Dr. Dan Kirkpatrick, Bobo's anesthesiologist at Gulf Coast Surgery Center in Sarasota. "One of our orthopedic surgeons, Dr. Brian Scofield, is a team doctor for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    The Tampa Bay Buccaneers (often shortened as the Bucs) are a professional American football team based in Tampa, Florida. They are currently members of the Southern Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL).
     and the Baltimore Orioles and we find these athletes do very well with this system and remain pain free." Kirkpatrick has been using the ambIT pain pump for more than two years without complications, he said. The surgical center operates on 44 patients a week performing orthopedic, general and podiatric surgery.

    "Using pain pumps is definitely the wave of the future," said Kirkpatrick, risks are reduced and patient comfort is enhanced. The ambIT pain pumps -- which hang from a belt pack and run on two AA batteries -- stay with the patient to ensure a comfortable recovery at home and include a button for the patient to push to increase the anesthetic dose in case he or she should begin to feel pain. "Patients go home after surgery, sleep in their own bed, use their own bathroom, and avoid the risks of hospital-acquired infections Hospital-Acquired Infections Definition

    A hospital-acquired infection is usually one that first appears three days after a patient is admitted to a hospital or other health care facility.
    . Before surgery, we show the patient how to remove their own catheter and after recovery, they mail the pain pump back to us."

    "So, why should a patient expect to hurt for several days after surgery when we have these high technology solutions to eliminate pain?" Kirkpatrick asks. "Traditionally, rotator cuff surgery was extremely painful. But today the bottom line is that I can make surgery patients pain-free for multiple days without having them experience nausea. We break the pain cycle and the patient is ambulatory earlier and recovers faster."

    "I'm completely satisfied," said Bobo of his sports-injury repair. "I even recommended the surgery to my 73-year-old father. I don't know how they could make the ambIT pump easier to use. It's an amazing product."

    About Sorenson Medical

    Sorenson Medical (www.sorensonmedical.com) specializes in the design and manufacture of compact, electronic ambulatory infusion pumps that are easy to use and deliver medication precisely. The ambIT line of infusion pumps offers physicians new options for managing post-operative pain, for delivering chemotherapy and IV anti-invectives, and for other continuous or intermittent therapies in the outpatient setting. Sorenson Medical is FDA FDA
    abbr.
    Food and Drug Administration


    FDA,
    n.pr See Food and Drug Administration.

    FDA,
    n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration.
     registered and the quality system is certified to ISO (1) See ISO speed.

    (2) (International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland, www.iso.ch) An organization that sets international standards, founded in 1946. The U.S. member body is ANSI.
     13485: 2003. Sorenson Medical's products are CE marked (European Conformity) for distribution in the European Union (EU) and European Economic Area European Economic Area: see European Free Trade Association; European Union.  (EEA EEA European Economic Area
    EEA European Environment Agency
    EEA Employment Equity Act (Canada)
    EEA Een En Ander (Dutch)
    EEA Erick van Egeraat Associated Architects
    EEA Energy and Environmental Analysis
    ).

    (C) 2005 Sorenson Medical. All products and brand names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. All rights reserved.
    COPYRIGHT 2005 Business Wire
    No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
    Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

     Reader Opinion

    Title:

    Comment:



     

    Article Details
    Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
    Publication:Business Wire
    Date:May 16, 2005
    Words:679
    Previous Article:Wireless Age Announces Earnings During First Quarter 2005.
    Next Article:Cadence 'Stars & Strikes' Bowling Tournament Raises over $1.2 Million for Fisher House at Palo Alto VA Hospital; Proceeds to Build a ``Home Away From...



    Related Articles
    The Clinic.
    Deciphering knee pain.
    Facing 'growing pains' and overcoming them.(Voices)
    Injuries to the foot and ankle in athletes.(Featured CME Topic: Sports Medicine)
    Anterior cruciate ligament rupture.(Featured CME Topic: Sports Medicine)
    The Patient's Page.(Special Section)
    Foot orthoses in sports medicine.(Featured CME Topic: Sports Medicine)
    NO LAUGHING MATTER JERRY LEWIS IS SPREADING THE WORD ABOUT THE DEVICE THAT ENDED HIS CHRONIC PAIN.(U)
    Injured golfers get back on course with tendon treatment.
    New treatment for painful heel bumps.(haglund's syndrome)

    Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles