• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Gold Coast Health & Knowledge Precinct

Transform with us

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Strategic Plan
    • Partners
      • City of Gold Coast
      • Griffith University
      • Gold Coast Health
      • Economic Development Queensland
      • Gold Coast Private Hospital
      • Cohort
      • Southport Sharks
    • Our people
    • Precinct Office
    • Map
    • Contact Us
  • Do Business
    • Investment Incentives
  • Live & Play
    • Australia’s Gold Coast
    • Residential – Smith Collective
    • Lifestyle – Retail and Recreation
  • Work & Study
  • Projects
    • Projects Overview
    • ADaPT
    • Clinical Entrepreneurship Change Agents Program
    • NeuTex Image-guided Surgery and Robotics Training Centre
  • Research
    • Overview
      • Additive Manufacturing
      • Biotechnologies
    • Research Institutes and Centres
    • Precinct experts
    • Research Equipment & Facilities
    • Clinical Trials
    • Health and medical training and conference hub
  • News
    • Latest News
    • Newsletter
    • Media
    • Video Channel
  • 中文
    • English
    • 中文

Filed Under: HEALTH, TECHNOLOGY Tagged With: Gold Coast Private Hospital, Griffith University, orthopaedics, Professor Randy Bindra

New orthopaedic surgery techniques for breaks, tears and pain

Dr Simon Platt, Gold Coast Private Hospital, is just one of the Precinct's innovative orthopaedic surgeons

Orthopaedic treatment continues to advance, utilising robotic surgery, innovative regenerative medicine techniques including 3D printing, and minimally-invasive procedures where possible to reduce risks and hasten healing.

From ‘all inside’ surgery for knee and ankle ligament repairs to alternative hip replacement techniques, surgeons at Gold Coast Private and Gold Coast University hospitals, and research colleagues at Griffith University, innovate to fix the breaks, replace and repair joints, ligaments and tendons and ease pain and arthritis.

Returning from working in the UK, Dr Annabelle Stabler has recently launched the city’s first private paediatric orthopaedic service, and joined her father,  veteran upper limb orthopaedic surgeon Dr David Stabler, who in his 35 years in practice has seen the Gold Coast orthopaedics field grow from 8 or 9 surgeons in the mid-1980’s, to around 70 now.

For the younger Dr Stabler, her work is as much about fixing childhood problems as it is about preventing issues in adulthood.

“With developmental dysplasia of the hip, and neuromuscular hip conditions in particular, screening and early non-operative intervention can make a huge difference for many children,” Dr Stabler says.

Dr Stabler has a particular interest in looking after children with hip problems, including babies with dysplastic hips, older children with Perthes and SUFE and children with neuromuscular conditions such as Cerebral Palsy.

Cutting edge research and surgery

Associate Professor Dr Chris Carty from the Queensland Children's Hospital (left) and Professor David Lloyd, who heads up the Griffith Centre from Biomedical and Rehabilitation Engineering (GCore), discuss personalised paediatric surgeries

It’s been a big team effort to develop award-winning technology incorporating in-silico (digitally-enabled) surgery and implant design, and 3D printed surgical cutting guides for individual paediatric patients – eight surgeries have now been successfully performed at Queensland Children’s hospital, thanks to the cutting-edge collaboration between surgeons and Griffith University researchers, led by Associate Professor Chris Carty. These digitally-enabled surgeries are reducing theatre time and aiming to improve patient outcomes, in what is an Australian-first. Read more

Professor Randy Bindra with prototype testing machine
Professor Randy Bindra

Fellow GCore clinical researcher Professor Randy Bindra continues to innovate, as clinical lead of a ground-breaking project to develop artificial wrist ligament to treat a common sports injury, and his quest for precision medicine extends all the way to the precious fingertips.

“In the past, fingertip injuries would simply be treated with amputation,” Professor Bindra says.

“With the right care, finger injuries including the tip, can be salvaged and restored – without it, these injuries can become a nightmare.”

Stepping forward with minimally invasive techniques

Dr Sonja Schleimer, Gold Coast Private Hospital

Minimally-invasive techniques in bunion surgery are relatively new to Australia, but foot and ankle surgeon Sonja Schleimer has years of experience, after training in Paris under one of its pioneers.

“MIS bunion surgery evolved in Europe over the last 15 years, but it has only been available in Australia for about the last five years or so,” says Dr Schleimer.

“I was very fortunate to spend some time operating with Dr Oliver Laffenetre, who was heavily involved in developing and evolving MIS techniques for forefoot surgery.”

Meanwhile, Dr Simon Platt is one of only a handful of orthopaedic surgeons in Queensland performing an “all-inside” ligament reconstruction to help patients suffering from chronic ankle instability get back into the sporting arena.

The foot and ankle specialist, who recently joined Gold Coast Private, says the less invasive technique, known as the ArthroBrostrom, resulted in fewer wounds, swelling and scaring than the more traditional approach to surgery.

Dr Price Gallie, Gold Coast Private

Dr Price Gallie also employs an ‘all-inside’ technique, in his case, for common knee surgery, with his arthroscopic ACL reconstruction using a shorter graft with a wider diameter that allows an accelerated recovery and may reduce the risk of re-rupture.

He employs a variety of grafts including the patellar tendon, quadriceps tendon and allograft (donor tendon), alongside the traditionally-used hamstring – matching the graft to the patient, rather than the other way around.

“With ACL reconstruction, we aim to restore normal movement and function, which is why I pioneered the introduction of the “all-inside” technique using the TLS® system,” he says.

More recently Dr Gallie has focussed on other graft choices and is currently studying the use of the peroneus longus tendon with very promising outcomes.

“We need to treat each patient on an individual basis rather than doing the same generic operation for everyone.”

For Dr Stephen Sprague, hip surgery is all about the contemporary approach – which is ‘front to back’ from the standard one.

Hip joint replacement surgery is traditionally done via a posterior approach through the back of the hip, but after training in the anterior method eight years ago, Dr Sprague prefers the alternative.

“Having performed both approaches during my career, I have observed that in the short-term people find the anterior approach less painful, while long-term outcomes are very similar,” he says.

“A huge benefit of the anterior approach is the reduced risk of dislocation which means the patient doesn’t have to worry about it in their day-to-day activities and can resume a much more normal lifestyle.”

Gold Coast Private has advanced state-of-the-art robotic technology giving surgeons the option of performing robot-assisted surgery in orthopaedics, ENT and neurology.

Orthopaedic lower limb surgeon Dr Andrew Letchford, offers robotic surgery for hip and knee joint replacement for improved planning and precision.

“Robotic-assisted surgery has only been available in Australia since 2016. We await joint registry confirmation of the full impact of this technology, however, we are definitely seeing improvements in the performance of partial knee replacement surgery,” Dr Letchford says.

“In my hands, I’ve certainly found a much more uniform, reliable outcome for my patients in the post-operative phase. Computer navigation has been around for many years and with the addition of robotic technology we have now developed ways to finely balance a joint replacement in real time.”

 

November 30, 2020 By Kathy Kruger

Filed Under: STUDY, TECHNOLOGY Tagged With: Cohort, Griffith University, NASA, Space Apps Challenge

People of the Precinct – career rockets to new heights

Dominique MacDonald overseeing NASA Space Apps Challenge Gold Coast 2020

Dominique MacDonald makes most of stellar opportunities

Griffith University engineering student leader Dominique MacDonald is set to complete a stellar four years of undergraduate studies, including STEM ambassadorships and industry placements, but not before taking her ambitions to new heights as host of the Gold Coast NASA Space Apps Challenge – part of the world’s largest global hackathon.

With 16 months experience as an R&D software developer for a Gold Coast biotech company already under her belt, and a graduate position as a robotics engineer at global mining giant Rio Tinto in her back pocket, the former Griffith Women in Engineering president has left little unaccomplished, turning to space as a new frontier.

Flying solo as lead for the inaugural local event, which she ran in virtual mode on-line from the Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct’s Cohort Innovation Hub (3-4 October), Dominique wasn’t sure what to expect from challenge participants, other than out-of-this world ideas.

READ MORE about the Space Apps Challenge

October 28, 2020 By Kathy Kruger

Filed Under: HEALTH, TECHNOLOGY Tagged With: ADaPT, Advanced Design and Prototyping Technologies Institute, Professor Randy Bindra

Artificial wrist ligament on the horizon

PhD candidate Alistair Quinn with Post-doctoral researcher Dr Jayishni Maharaj test the artificial wrist ligament

New artificial wrist ligament technology offers the promise of not only repairing the most common wrist injury in young, active people, but providing a platform technology that will transform how sports injuries are treated.

With renowned surgeon Professor Randy Bindra from Gold Coast University Hospital leading a multi-disciplinary team in the Griffith Centre of Biomedical and Rehabilitation Engineering (GCORE), progress is heading towards human trials within two years.

The project, funded by an almost $900,000 BioMedTech Horizons program grant from the Australian Government, is using groundbreaking bioengineering and 3D printing technology to create hope for sufferers of Scapholunate Interosseous Ligament (SLIL) injury.

SLIL injuries cause dislocation of scaphoid and lunate bones and can be career-ending for an athlete and result in long-term disability for others, with current treatments that improvise to use tendon in place of ligament having a poor prognosis. Long-term pain, limitation of movement and arthritis are often the eventual outcome.

“What we are trying to create is a ligament scaffold that is customised to the patient and is seeded with cells, so its a live ligament that is ready to grow and heal,” explains Professor Bindra.

If we can perfect the science and make this a reliable platform starting off in the wrist, we could use it anywhere else where there’s a ligament injury.”

Professor Randy Bindra

Since commencing the pioneering project in 2018, the unique 3D printed bone-ligament-bone scaffold has undergone several design improvements based on finite element modelling to create an implant optimised in size and strength for clinical use. Using MR imaging, the team have created a digital twin for printing a personalised scaffold for implantation in a real size model.

In the final stage, the scaffold is then implanted in a cadaver model using custom drilling jigs and the construct is mounted in a robotic tester for endurance testing.

Ligament scaffold implanted in bone model (above) and cadaver (below)

The team is working with world-leading regenerative medicine company Orthocell, utlising their Cellgro technology to seed the printed scaffold with human cells, which will effectively enable the implanted ligament to regrow inside the patient.

“It is wonderful to see this project mature from a design idea to the real possibility of use in surgery – this could only be possible at GCORE,  where a diverse team of engineers, designers, material experts and surgeons come together with the goal of solving clinical problems and enhancing patient lives,” Professor Bindra says.

August 31, 2020 By Kathy Kruger

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • From Research to Reality: GCHKP Talent Leads the LuminaX 2025 Cohort
  • A New Era of Health and Tech Innovation: HATRIC to Transform the Gold Coast
  • Clinician Entrepreneurship Program wraps as a big success
  • 2025 International Women’s Day
  • International Women’s Day event 2025
  • Associate Prof Lara Herrero leading the fight against mosquito-borne diseases and advancing medical research
  • INVEST-FEST accelerates founder funding
  • Student innovation incubator set to launch in 2025
  • World-first clinical trial for treating spinal cord injury
  • Australian-designed Total Artificial Heart amongst The Australian’s Top 100

Archives

  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • July 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • October 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • May 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • December 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • October 2018
  • August 2018

Subscribe to our newsletter and we’ll update you on all that’s new in our Precinct.

Latest News

From Research to Reality: GCHKP Talent Leads the LuminaX 2025 Cohort image

From Research to Reality: GCHKP Talent Leads the LuminaX 2025 Cohort

Read More >

A New Era of Health and Tech Innovation: HATRIC to Transform the Gold Coast image

A New Era of Health and Tech Innovation: HATRIC to Transform the Gold Coast

Read More >

Clinician Entrepreneurship Program wraps as a big success image

Clinician Entrepreneurship Program wraps as a big success

Read More >

2025 International Women's Day image

2025 International Women's Day

Read More >

International Women's Day event 2025 image

International Women's Day event 2025

Read More >

Associate Prof Lara Herrero leading the fight against mosquito-borne diseases and advancing medical research image

Associate Prof Lara Herrero leading the fight against mosquito-borne diseases and advancing medical research

Read More >

Before Footer

Search

Asia-Pacific’s emerging health and innovation hub, the 200-hectare Gold Coast Health & Knowledge Precinct (GCHKP) is a unique global business location for high-tech industry development, research collaboration and jobs of the future.

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Precinct Map
  • News
  • Do Business
  • Work & Study
  • Partners
  • Projects
  • Research
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Subscribe
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

© 2025 Gold Coast Health and Knowledge Precinct. All rights reserved.

Designed and Developed by Stead Lane