If I Had a Hammer: The Role of Automated Impactors in Transforming Total Hip Arthroplasty Procedures and Recovery
Todd C. Kelley, Andrew J. Webber

TL;DR
This study shows that using an automated impactor during hip surgery reduces surgeon stress and improves patient recovery.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel dual approach combining wearable and mobile sensing to assess surgeon and patient outcomes with automated impactors.
Findings
Automated impactors significantly reduce surgeon stress and improve sleep quality compared to traditional mallets.
Patients treated with automated impactors show better postoperative mobility and function.
Mobile and wearable sensing technologies effectively capture real-world impacts of surgical innovations.
Abstract
Impaction during total hip arthroplasty (THA) is physically demanding and places considerable stress on surgeons, contributing to fatigue and musculoskeletal injury. Automated impactor systems have emerged as a potential solution to reduce these physical demands. This study explores the dual benefits of such a system in THA, focusing on both surgeon well-being and patient recovery outcomes. The research combines wearable sensing technology and mobile sensing applications across two complementary studies. The Surgeon Exertion arm of the study assessed surgeon exertion and well-being during THA procedures performed with a traditional mallet vs an automated impactor system, measuring physiological stress markers and recovery indicators with the use of wearable sensing technology. The Postoperative Patient Outcomes arm evaluated patient recovery outcomes, leveraging mobile sensing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthopaedic implants and arthroplasty · Total Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes · Prosthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics
