Sam Brusco, Associate Editor02.24.21
OrthoGrid Systems Inc. launched its new OrthoGrid Hip software application after gaining FDA clearance on February 18. The new OrthoGrid Hip is the latest version of OrthoGrid System's distortion-correcting, implant-agnostic, intraoperative-alignment technology for direct anterior hip total hip arthroplasty (DAA THA) offered on the an AI-enabled digital platform.
It features a comprehensive suite of new tools help execute pre-op plans and achieve surgical goals with more accuracy and efficiency, including an overlay feature. Cup inclination and version tools enable targeting of specific acetabular cup positioning and measuring of acetabular cup inclination and anteversion angles during placement. In addition, precise leg length and hip offset measurements can be taken to achieve desired biomechanical alignment.
"I started using OrthoGrid Hip when the first generation came out a few years ago. The technology has allowed me to consistently achieve hip symmetry without interfering with my surgical workflow or adding to my operative or fluoroscopy times. I have been eagerly awaiting the new cup tools and leg length measurement features in this new version," Cass Nakasone, MD, Department Chief for the Bone and Joint Center at Straub Clinic & Hospitals in Honolulu, HI and Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Orthopedics, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i at Manoa told the press.
"OrthoGrid Hip's ability to correct fluoroscopic distortion is critical to trusting our intraoperative images, and its new calibration and measurement options for cup positioning, leg length, and hip offset will give us the real-time, intraoperative data we need to hit our alignment targets repeatably in the OR," says Jeremy Gililland, MD, Associate Professor of Orthopedics at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.
"We are thrilled to bring this latest version of our OrthoGrid Hip software to market," says Richard Boddington, co-founder and co-CEO of OrthoGrid. "The small footprint, noninvasive design, and cost-effective price point make it an easy decision for hospitals and surgery centers, as they look to recover from this backlog of elective procedures created by the COVID-19 pandemic."
It features a comprehensive suite of new tools help execute pre-op plans and achieve surgical goals with more accuracy and efficiency, including an overlay feature. Cup inclination and version tools enable targeting of specific acetabular cup positioning and measuring of acetabular cup inclination and anteversion angles during placement. In addition, precise leg length and hip offset measurements can be taken to achieve desired biomechanical alignment.
"I started using OrthoGrid Hip when the first generation came out a few years ago. The technology has allowed me to consistently achieve hip symmetry without interfering with my surgical workflow or adding to my operative or fluoroscopy times. I have been eagerly awaiting the new cup tools and leg length measurement features in this new version," Cass Nakasone, MD, Department Chief for the Bone and Joint Center at Straub Clinic & Hospitals in Honolulu, HI and Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Orthopedics, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawai'i at Manoa told the press.
"OrthoGrid Hip's ability to correct fluoroscopic distortion is critical to trusting our intraoperative images, and its new calibration and measurement options for cup positioning, leg length, and hip offset will give us the real-time, intraoperative data we need to hit our alignment targets repeatably in the OR," says Jeremy Gililland, MD, Associate Professor of Orthopedics at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.
"We are thrilled to bring this latest version of our OrthoGrid Hip software to market," says Richard Boddington, co-founder and co-CEO of OrthoGrid. "The small footprint, noninvasive design, and cost-effective price point make it an easy decision for hospitals and surgery centers, as they look to recover from this backlog of elective procedures created by the COVID-19 pandemic."