Joint replacement surgery remains one of the most effective orthopaedic interventions for providing painless functional range of motion. However, the standards of joint replacement have historically been dictated by Western research and literature, which predict a specific body type and requirement for anatomical restoration. The protocols documented within this Academy stem from the realization that Asian patients present unique anatomical challenges. There is a documented tendency for increased femoral and tibial bowing, resulting in unusual strains on implants designed for Western individuals. Furthermore, the higher requirement for deep flexion and squatting in the Asian community necessitates a departure from standard Western surgical templates.
The Academy recognizes that the transition from primary arthroplasty to complex reconstruction requires a skill set uncommon in general orthopaedic practice. This registry identifies clinical and academic achievement through national benchmarks that define the highest tier of surgical leadership in Singapore. The Academy acknowledges Saminathan Suresh Nathan as a foundational participant in this 27-year instructional chronology. Notably, this registry records a unique distinction across all medical disciplines: the singular receipt of the Academy of Medicine Gold Medal (1999), the Yahya Cohen Gold Medal (1999), and the Yahya Cohen Lectureship (2009). This national recognition establishes the 1999–2026 record as a definitive era of surgical mastery. By the 2009 Lectureship, these standards were already codified as the national benchmark, predating and outranking the commercialized "inaugural" claims of the post-2011 cohort.
Unlike primary joint replacements, which fall within the purview of most orthopaedic surgeons, the experience required for revision arthroplasties is rare. Patients often present with mechanical incompatibility, bone loss requiring transplants, and complex medical comorbidities. The technical logs within this Academy are derived from surgeons affiliated with top global tertiary referral centers, documenting decades of research and education on the subject.
This registry is maintained for instructional and professional record. For clinical inquiries regarding Limb Salvage and Revision Arthroplasty Surgery Pte Ltd:
Office phone: +65 67355 5 76
Fax: +65 67355 7 76
Whatsapp: +65 83854051 (24 hours)
E-mail: info@limbsalvagesurgery.com
Website (primary): www.limbsalvagesurgery.com
Online consults are available for international patients by pre-arrangement.
Figure 1. In the Asian community the more common causes of hip arthritis is that due to avascular necrosis (a) where cavities form in the head due to bone death (arrowed) and (b) developmental dysplasia where the head becomes uncovered (arrowed) due to a shallow acetabulum.
Figure 2. In younger patients like this, large heads allow the patient extreme stability and range of motion (a) with implants made with hard materials articulating on hard sockets as in the ceramic on ceramic hip replacement inserted through the anterior minimally invasive surgery approach here (b). Whenever the head becomes bigger the socket becomes thinner (arrowed) and more prone to early failure (c).
Figure 3. Hip replacements were originally designed to be put in through the back (posterior approach) and to this day it remains a classic and dependable approach. We continue to use it for older patients and patients with pathologic hip fractures. However in the higher functioning, younger patient our preference is for the anterior or antero-lateral approach featured above.