Patients who got a Stryker Rejuvenate or ABGII hip insert were likely terrified to hear in July, 2012, that both models had been reviewed. Stryker hip lawyers got several telephone calls from terrified and irate insert beneficiaries. All things considered, these patients had been guaranteed that the Stryker hip inserts were splendidly sheltered. Alongside Stryker hip lawyers, most specialists accepted the new Stryker insert models were much more secure than the "genuine" metal-on-metal embeds because of the artistic ball.
Sadly, a critical number of patients started having genuine wellbeing issues after their Stryker hip insert surgery.
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Saturday, June 21, 2014
Stryker Cobalt Toxicity—How Serious Is It?
As more and more metal hip
implants are being recalled, those who were implanted with a Stryker hip
device—believing it to be safe—are dismayed to find that Stryker cobalt
toxicity is just one health risk associated with the Rejuvenate and ABGII. The
Rejuvenate and ABGII Stryker implants are not “true” metal-on-metal implants
due to the fact that they use a ceramic ball. Unfortunately, the Stryker
implants share the same risks of fretting and corrosion. In fact, at the time
of the recall, Stryker stated a higher-than-normal risk of implant failure from
the fretting, corrosion and excess metal debris shedding into the body.
When Stryker introduced the
ABGII and the Rejuvenate, there were no safety risks relayed to patients,
particularly concerning Stryker cobalt toxicity.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
One Woman’s Stryker Metal on Metal Poisoning Symptoms
One doctor detailed Stryker
metal on metal poisoning symptoms among his patients; a representative case was
a woman in her early seventies who suffered a variety of Stryker metal on metal
poisoning symptoms following her Stryker hip implant three years prior. The
woman suffered such Stryker metal on metal poisoning symptoms as neurological
disorders (including cognitive decline) memory difficulties, depression, a
continuous taste of metal in her mouth, severe headaches and mild levels of
groin pain.
Although an x-ray showed a
well-aligned implant, blood tests showed astronomical levels of cobalt and
chromium—above 240 parts per million. The woman had experienced a
cerebrovascular episode a year earlier, with Stryker metal on metal poisoning
symptoms similar to a stroke: dizziness, disorientation, nausea and vertigo.
Saturday, June 14, 2014
When Symptoms of Stryker Cobalt Toxicity Lead to Serious Health Issues in Patients
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
The Stryker Hip Implant Recall and Its Effect on Implant Recipients
Stryker, a Michigan-based
corporation, issued a Stryker hip implant recall in July, 2012. This Stryker
hip implant recall came on the heels of an urgent field safety notification
sent to hospitals and physicians in April, 2012. The notification as well as
the Stryker hip implant recall stated a higher than normal risk of failure for
the hip implants due to fretting and corrosion. Even though the Rejuvenate and
ABGII hip implant devices use a ceramic ball, and are therefore not “true”
metal-on-metal hip implants, they nonetheless are constructed of a cobalt and
chromium neck, a titanium stem, and metal trunnions located on either end of
the neck portion.
The metal neck juncture and
the metal trunnions allow body fluids to become trapped, causing corrosion. The
fretting and corrosion lead to tiny metal ions being sheared away from the
device,
Sunday, June 8, 2014
Possible Design Defects of the Stryker Rejuvenate
A recall of the Stryker
Rejuvenate in July, 2012, caused those with the implant to wonder what steps
they should take in order to protect their health and their future. An urgent
field safety notification was sent out by Stryker regarding the Stryker
Rejuvenate in April, 2012, stating that the device was more likely to fail due
to excessive fretting and corrosion. The corrosion which could likely occur in
many recipients of the Stryker Rejuvenate led to excess metal debris being
released into the body. These metal ions could either pool in the hip tissue or
travel to the bloodstream.
When the ions burrow into hip
tissues, the patient can suffer inflammation of the hip, infection, chronic
pain, degradation of hip tissue and serious loss of bone. When these symptoms
reach serious levels, hip failure occurs and revision surgery becomes
necessary. Metal toxicity can occur when the metal ions build up in the
bloodstream among those with a Stryker Rejuvenate hip implant. Patients have
varying responses to cobalt and chromium; some patients with relatively low
levels of the metals become very sick while others with higher levels may not
yet be exhibiting metal poisoning symptoms.
Sunday, June 1, 2014
Large Study Shows Women 29% More Likely Than Men to Experience Hip Implant Failure
A recent study done in
California which looked at more than 35,000 hip replacement surgeries across 46
hospitals in the Kaiser Permanente health system claims that hip replacements
are more likely to fail in women than in men. This includes all types of hip
implants—ceramic, polyethylene and metal-on-metal although. While fewer women
are implanted with metal-on-metal hip implants, the failure rate of those types
of implants was nearly twice as high for women as for men. The all-metal hip
implants were marketed as being extremely durable, lasting fifteen years and
more.
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