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Specialty pillarOther specialties
Beyond joint replacement and preservation, this practice covers the surrounding breadth of orthopaedics: complex trauma, foot and ankle surgery, deformity correction in children, and spinopelvic fixation.
Complex trauma & joint fractures
Fractures that enter joints, shatter into fragments or occur around existing implants must be rebuilt anatomically — imperfect reduction of a joint surface leads directly to arthritis. These injuries are covered in depth on the trauma & fracture care page, and pelvis and hip-socket fractures on the pelvi-acetabular reconstruction page.
Foot & ankle surgery
From ankle fractures and ligament injuries to deformities such as bunions and flat feet, foot and ankle problems are assessed with the same principle as every joint: preserve what can be preserved, reconstruct what cannot.
Deformity correction in paediatric patients
Bowed legs, knock knees, growth-plate disturbances and post-fracture deformities in children demand judgement that respects the growing skeleton — knowing which deformities will correct themselves with growth, which need guided-growth procedures, and which need corrective osteotomy. Timing is everything: correcting at the right age is a smaller operation with a better result.
Spinopelvic fixation
Where the spine meets the pelvis, high-energy injuries can dissociate the two — unstable sacral fractures and spinopelvic dissociation are among the most severe injuries in orthopaedic trauma. Their fixation demands combined mastery of pelvic and spinal fixation techniques, and connects directly to this practice's pelvi-acetabular expertise.
Orthopaedic infections & bone lesions
Bone and joint infections — including infected joint replacements, which link to this practice's revision expertise — are managed with accurate diagnosis, targeted antibiotics and staged surgery where needed. Bone lesions found on X-ray are evaluated systematically and coordinated with oncology services when required.
My child's legs look bowed. Is surgery needed?
Often not — many childhood alignment variations correct with growth. The distinction between normal variation and true deformity is made on examination and standing X-rays, and when correction is needed, doing it at the right age keeps it small.
What is spinopelvic dissociation?
A high-energy injury in which the spine effectively separates from the pelvis through fractures of the sacrum. It is unstable and needs specialised fixation bridging both regions — early referral to a surgeon experienced in pelvic fixation is critical.
I have been told my bone infection will never fully heal. Is that true?
Chronic bone infection is difficult but rarely hopeless. With accurate identification of the organism, radical clearance and staged reconstruction, many 'incurable' infections are brought under lasting control.
A problem that doesn't fit a neat category?
Weekday OPD in Lucknow, weekend OPD in Ayodhya. Call or send your reports on WhatsApp to begin.
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