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Uzbek national walks after 9 years!

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Press Trust of India Gurgaon
A wheelchair bound Uzbekistan national has been able to walk after nine years following a successful surgery in a city based private hospital here.

55-year-old Guzal Ruzamatova had met with a traffic accident in 2006 and sustained a fracture of the shaft of her left femur (the thigh bone). While she underwent a series of surgeries, the issue could not be corrected.

Finally in 2009 all the implants and external fixators were removed and the leg was left to heal on its own. As a result, the patient was practically wheelchair bound with barely any mobility.

Ruzamatova contacted the doctors at Medanta Bone and Joint Institute (MBJI) and it was found that she had a shortening of about 12.5 cms of the left leg.
 

She had an extremely limited range of movement of just 20-60 degrees of the left knee. Additionally, the shoe raise worn by her was extremely heavy and did not allow for much motion, said Dr Ashok Rajgopal, Chairman MBJI.

Dr Rajgopal, and his team immediately recommended her for a segmental resection and a total knee replacement surgery, both cutting edge procedures.

In a surgery that lasted almost six hours, both the procedures were successfully performed on December 17.

"When we first met her, she was severely disabled and was a wheelchair bound patient. She had nine previous surgeries and multiple scars on the same leg. Her limb was a little over 12cm short and had an un-united fracture of the thigh bone. We did a segmental resection implant and restored about 11cm of her leg length without damaging any nerve or blood vessel, thereby restoring her quality of life," said Rajgopal.

Today, almost three weeks after surgery, Ruzamatova is re-discovering the joys of an independent life free from the handicaps and is comfortably mobile albeit with a walker and independent in all her personal activities of daily living and can bend her knee normally.

She has regained 11cms of length in her left leg basically making the length of both her legs almost the same further aiding her movement. With a small insole of 1.5 cms she can further do away with any need of wearing the cumbersome shoe raise in future, the doctor said.

Narrating about her experience, Ruzamatova said, "I was treated at Tashkent earlier but it didn't help me much. I didn't have any hope of getting back my leg and walking normally. I am grateful to the doctors for returning my life back to normal.
(REOPENS BOM8)

Gupta said some of the patients complained of partial

vision loss.

"Vision is very less... It is too early to say that they have lost eye sight. We are still treating them. It will take at least 2 to 3 days to see how they respond to the drugs being given to them," he said.

Meanwhile, Jitender Reddy, son-in-law of one of the affected persons, Anji Reddy (70), alleged negligence on part of the doctors and said they are planning to lodge a police complaint.

"My father-in-law, along with other patients, has undergone surgery five times after this incident (to remove the infection), but none of them has responded positively to the treatment," he alleged.

Jitender said the patients, most of whom are agriculture labourers from Chevella mandal of neighbouring Ranga Reddy district of Telangana, had got admitted to the hospital with complaint of redness in their eyes and blurred vision.

"However, the doctors at the hospital without informing us suddenly conducted cataract surgeries. We are still being kept in dark about what kind of surgery they have conducted and also treatment being given to the patients," he alleged.

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First Published: Jan 06 2016 | 5:32 PM IST

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