Surgeons remove half of pelvis, save leg during bone cancer treatment
March 22nd, 2011 - 5:17 pm ICT by ANIWashington, March 22 (ANI): Surgeons at UC San Diego Health System and Moores Cancer Center have successfully treated a rare bone cancer.
During the surgery, doctors removed 50 percent of a patient’s pelvis. Instead of amputating the connected leg, the surgical team saved the entire limb. The patient was able to walk with assistance five weeks after surgery.
“All I can tell you is that the pain was so bad. I could not walk for one month before my operation,” said Carlos Ortiz, 62, a delivery driver.
“Now the pain is gone, simply gone. I am so grateful.”
Ortiz was diagnosed with a form of cancer called chondrosarcoma, the second most common bone malignancy affecting older adults. This cancer is not responsive to chemotherapy or radiation. Surgery is the only treatment option, which, in 90 percent of cases, results in a disfiguring loss of the leg and part of the hip.
“It is an absolute joy to see Mr. Ortiz walk,” said Anna A. Kulidjian, surgical oncologist in the Department of Orthopaedics at UC San Diego.
During the operation to remove half the pelvis, the team freed the tumor and salvaged the leg. The growth was embedded in the pelvic bone, nerves and blood vessels and adjacent to critical structures such as the bladder, bowel and prostate.
The surgeons disconnected the massive growth from its blood supply without disrupting critical blood flow to the buttock and leg. The leg muscle was then reconstructed and attached to the abdominal musculature. Over time, a combination of scarring and new muscle will hold the leg bone in place.(ANI)
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Tags: abdominal musculature, absolute joy, blood supply, buttock, cancer center, cancer treatment, carlos ortiz, critical structures, delivery driver, leg bone, leg muscle, malignancy, massive growth, older adults, pelvic bone, pelvis, rare bone cancer, san diego health, surgical oncologist, uc san diego