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#7 Dr. Greg DiFelice: The Career-Saving Option of ACL Repair Surgery

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When? This feed was archived on August 28, 2020 15:07 (4y ago). Last successful fetch was on May 23, 2020 16:07 (4+ y ago)

Why? Inactive feed status. Our servers were unable to retrieve a valid podcast feed for a sustained period.

What now? You might be able to find a more up-to-date version using the search function. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 181061393 series 1458061
Content provided by Maureen Holohan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Maureen Holohan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

ACL repair surgery is something that the orthopedic surgery community is just now beginning to talk about after decades of subscribing to the belief that it isn’t possible. The belief is slowly changing, in large part because of the groundbreaking surgical work of my guest on this episode, Dr. Gregory DiFelice of the Hospital for Special Surgery, Sports Traumatology & Joint Preservation Surgical department. In this conversation we talk about about the approach surgeons have taken in approaching ACL surgery in the past, what he’s done to ask questions that nobody was asking, and how his steps have led to the reintroduction of ACL repair surgery that is proving to be highly successful. This is a very important topic to me because I experienced my own ACL injury and had to undergo surgery myself.

Maureen: So the body wants to heal...

Dr. DiFelice: You’re darn straight, it does. It wants to heal everything and all we’ve gotta’ do is get out of its way and try and let it heal.

Click here to download on iTunes ACL repair surgery is not impossible, surgeons have only thought it was for the past 30 years.

Dr. DiFelice points out that it’s hard to overcome the long-held beliefs of any group of people. That’s what he’s discovered has been the case among orthopedic surgeons for the last 30 years. Efforts in the past made to repair ACLs instead of replacing them met with very low success rates, so the concept was abandoned. But his research has shown that those stats are the results of applying the same surgery to EVERY type of ACL injury. Taking a closer look enabled him to determine that the patients who did do well with ACL repair surgeries had a particular type of injury and revealed an option he felt deserved more consideration.

Dr. DiFelice: I’ve been doing this (surgery) for eight years now, I’ve done almost one hundred (now over one hundred) primary repairs, we’re running at well over 90% success rate, and I’m pretty much used to it.

The orthopedic surgery community is starting to come around, so ask your doctor about the possibility of ACL repair surgery.

There is only one way the promising possibilities of ACL repair surgery can become mainstream, and that’s for patients to ask their surgeons why they don’t do repair surgeries that are having such huge success rates. Then, surgeons who have not learned the new methods Dr. DiFelice has pioneered may begin to explore it as an option to add to their practice. But more importantly, many young athletes can potentially be spared the agony of a more invasive surgery they don’t need and athletic careers can be saved. That's what matters to me - and why I wanted to have Dr. DiFelice on the show.

Dr. DiFelice: As you know, change is hard and we’re sitting on a situation here where three generations of orthopedic surgeons have been trained as their dogma that the ACL cannot be healed. So basically, I’m going against the Bible… you have to open your mind to believe that maybe there could be a different way, maybe they were mistaken.

Click here to download on iTunes Outline of this episode
  • [0:23] Maureen’s introduction to Dr. Gregory DiFelice, surgeon.
  • [3:39] The problems faced with ACL surgery and the outcomes normally achieved.
  • [6:53] The way ACL injuries used to be handled compared to current methods.
  • [9:19] Why younger athletes who have ACL surgery experience greater failure of the surgery.
  • [14:34] Changes Dr. DiFelice has made to his surgical approach - and the improvements he’s seeing.
  • [24:28] How the type of ACL tear is diagnosed and treatment is determined.
  • [27:03] The amazing results Dr. DiFelice is seeing with his new surgery.
  • [30:35] The difference in pain meds needed with the two types of surgeries.
  • [35:19] Cost comparisons and insurance issues.
  • [37:04] The post-surgery advice given to each category of surgical patient.
  • [52:49] The impact of the repair surgery on the growth plate of young athletes.
  • [55:41] Dr. DiFelice’s hopes for the future of this surgical procedure.
Resources Mentioned
  continue reading

7 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 

Archived series ("Inactive feed" status)

When? This feed was archived on August 28, 2020 15:07 (4y ago). Last successful fetch was on May 23, 2020 16:07 (4+ y ago)

Why? Inactive feed status. Our servers were unable to retrieve a valid podcast feed for a sustained period.

What now? You might be able to find a more up-to-date version using the search function. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 181061393 series 1458061
Content provided by Maureen Holohan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Maureen Holohan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

ACL repair surgery is something that the orthopedic surgery community is just now beginning to talk about after decades of subscribing to the belief that it isn’t possible. The belief is slowly changing, in large part because of the groundbreaking surgical work of my guest on this episode, Dr. Gregory DiFelice of the Hospital for Special Surgery, Sports Traumatology & Joint Preservation Surgical department. In this conversation we talk about about the approach surgeons have taken in approaching ACL surgery in the past, what he’s done to ask questions that nobody was asking, and how his steps have led to the reintroduction of ACL repair surgery that is proving to be highly successful. This is a very important topic to me because I experienced my own ACL injury and had to undergo surgery myself.

Maureen: So the body wants to heal...

Dr. DiFelice: You’re darn straight, it does. It wants to heal everything and all we’ve gotta’ do is get out of its way and try and let it heal.

Click here to download on iTunes ACL repair surgery is not impossible, surgeons have only thought it was for the past 30 years.

Dr. DiFelice points out that it’s hard to overcome the long-held beliefs of any group of people. That’s what he’s discovered has been the case among orthopedic surgeons for the last 30 years. Efforts in the past made to repair ACLs instead of replacing them met with very low success rates, so the concept was abandoned. But his research has shown that those stats are the results of applying the same surgery to EVERY type of ACL injury. Taking a closer look enabled him to determine that the patients who did do well with ACL repair surgeries had a particular type of injury and revealed an option he felt deserved more consideration.

Dr. DiFelice: I’ve been doing this (surgery) for eight years now, I’ve done almost one hundred (now over one hundred) primary repairs, we’re running at well over 90% success rate, and I’m pretty much used to it.

The orthopedic surgery community is starting to come around, so ask your doctor about the possibility of ACL repair surgery.

There is only one way the promising possibilities of ACL repair surgery can become mainstream, and that’s for patients to ask their surgeons why they don’t do repair surgeries that are having such huge success rates. Then, surgeons who have not learned the new methods Dr. DiFelice has pioneered may begin to explore it as an option to add to their practice. But more importantly, many young athletes can potentially be spared the agony of a more invasive surgery they don’t need and athletic careers can be saved. That's what matters to me - and why I wanted to have Dr. DiFelice on the show.

Dr. DiFelice: As you know, change is hard and we’re sitting on a situation here where three generations of orthopedic surgeons have been trained as their dogma that the ACL cannot be healed. So basically, I’m going against the Bible… you have to open your mind to believe that maybe there could be a different way, maybe they were mistaken.

Click here to download on iTunes Outline of this episode
  • [0:23] Maureen’s introduction to Dr. Gregory DiFelice, surgeon.
  • [3:39] The problems faced with ACL surgery and the outcomes normally achieved.
  • [6:53] The way ACL injuries used to be handled compared to current methods.
  • [9:19] Why younger athletes who have ACL surgery experience greater failure of the surgery.
  • [14:34] Changes Dr. DiFelice has made to his surgical approach - and the improvements he’s seeing.
  • [24:28] How the type of ACL tear is diagnosed and treatment is determined.
  • [27:03] The amazing results Dr. DiFelice is seeing with his new surgery.
  • [30:35] The difference in pain meds needed with the two types of surgeries.
  • [35:19] Cost comparisons and insurance issues.
  • [37:04] The post-surgery advice given to each category of surgical patient.
  • [52:49] The impact of the repair surgery on the growth plate of young athletes.
  • [55:41] Dr. DiFelice’s hopes for the future of this surgical procedure.
Resources Mentioned
  continue reading

7 episodes

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