Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Baby Boomers getting more Hip Injuries
Newswise — A serious bicycle accident left
David Goodman with a severely shattered left
hip.
But ever since Dr. Michael Stover of Loyola
University Health System rebuilt Goodman's
pelvis and replaced his hip, the 67-year-old
Chicago resident has been able to do
everything that he could before his accident
-- without pain.
Goodman works out or does yoga six days a
week. Four months after surgery, he climbed
a mountain in Israel. Last summer, he rode
his bicycle 442 miles across Iowa in a week,
averaging 63 miles per day. This winter, he
plans to go skiing.
Stover is seeing more hip and pelvic
fractures in older patients who are injured
in activities such as bicycling. "Our aging
population is more active than it was
before," he said.
Stover is an associate professor in the
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and
Rehabilitation at Loyola University Chicago
Stritch School of Medicine.
Stover and his partner, Dr. Hobie Summers,
use leading edge technologies to treat
serious and sometimes life-threatening
orthopedic conditions such as pelvic
fractures, broken legs, foot and ankle
injuries and dislocations.
They also treat patients who have
experienced multiple traumatic injuries.
Summers' areas of expertise include
fractures that fail to heal, are slow to
heal or heal improperly.
"It's
very rewarding to take a bone that doesn't
heal and get it to heal so the patient can
get back to his life," Summers said.
"You
can significantly improve patients'
function, pain and disability, and get them
back to work and to their normal activities.
They are very happy." Summers is an
assistant professor in the Department of
Orthopaedic Surgergy and Rehabilitation at
Stritch.
Stover and Summers have completed
fellowships in orthopedic traumatology.
Stover has additional fellowship training in
pelvic and acetabular (hip socket)
reconstruction.
Stover's comprehensive hip and pelvis
practice includes treatments for such
conditions as hip arthritis, congenital
problems, trauma and fractures that do not
heal or heal improperly.
Stover specializes in cases that are complex
and difficult. Goodman's case is a good
example. In 2007, Goodman collided with a
fellow bicyclist while doing a group ride on
Lake Shore Drive in Chicago. The nearest
hospital did not have the expertise to treat
his injury, so Goodman was transferred to
Loyola.
Stover performed surgery to repair Goodman's
fractured left hip socket. The fracture
healed, but Goodman later developed painful
arthritis of the hip. In 2008, Stover
performed a total hip replacement, and
Goodman has been pain free ever since.
Another Stover patient, Jill Gillis of
suburban Lockport, suffered an even more
complex hip injury. She was riding her horse
when the horse was spooked, reared up and
fell backward on her. Her pelvis was
shattered under the weight of the
1,500-pound horse. She was airlifted to
Loyola, where Stover put her pelvis back
together with plates and screws.
Gillis, 42, spent a month in the hospital
and another two or three months at home in
bed. She had a limp at first, but now walks
normally. "People don't even know I was in
an accident," she said. "Dr. Stover's team
did miraculous work. I thank God for his
hands."
... ..
...
...