Get Back on that Horse
Lilly Hanbury,
15, from Petersfield, England was horse riding with friends when
the horse in front of her kicked and struck her leg. She was left with
an open fracture of the tibia. “I didn’t think it hurt much,”
Lilly said afterwards, “but I learned later that was because
I was in shock. The doctor told my mum that it was a serious
break.”
Lilly received
two surgeries, but twelve weeks later, when her doctors removed
her cast, x-rays revealed that her tibia was not healing. Nine
months after the accident, with still no evidence of healing,
Lilly’s doctors suggested that she see a specialist.
An experienced
equestrian who has been riding since she was age five, Lilly
was unable to do that thing she loved, ride her horse. “The injury
was a terrible inconvenience,” her mother said. “Worse was the
fact that a very spirited young girl couldn’t participate in
normal activities, and we couldn’t see an end to the problem.”
After consulting
a local orthopedic surgeon, the Hanbury family learned that to
fix Lilly’s leg, surgery was necessary that would implant a Russell-Taylor
Intramedullary Nail into her leg. Her mother Daphne, a Memphis
native, consulted the Memphis-based Campbell Clinic and learned
that current research at the Campbell Clinic involved the Russell-Taylor
Intramedullary Nail.
The combination
of world-class clinical care and cutting-edge research convinced
the Hanbury family that Lilly needed to come to Memphis. One
week later, Lilly underwent surgery by the Campbell Clinic’s
James H. Calandruccio, M.D. and William C. Warner, M.D., who
inserted the nail into Lilly’s tibia, securing the rod with locking
screws.
After rest and
physical therapy, Lilly’s fracture has healed, and now she is
back on her horse, playing polo on a club team. She also plays
for her school lacrosse team and enjoys another favorite social
activity, dancing.
FACTS: TIBIA FRACTURES
- Tibia fractures are the most common of all long-bone fractures.
- The National Center for Health Statistics has reported
an average occurrence rate of approximately 492,000 fractures
of the tibia and fibula in the U.S. each year.
- Despite treatments with casts, plates, intramedullary nails
or external fixators, more than 50,000 Americans suffer from
a non-union of the tibia annually.
[Story, pictures, statistics courtesy
of the Campbell Foundation]