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Amazing stem cell treatment saves Kent man's leg

By: KentOnline reporter multimediadesk@thekmgroup.co.uk

Published: 12:47, 17 December 2009

Updated: 12:47, 17 December 2009

Watch YouTube video of Andrew Kent's rescue. Footage taken by Langdale and Ambleside Mountain Rescue

A Gillingham man who faced losing his leg in a climbing accident saw it saved thanks to a revolutionary 'glue' made from stem cells.

Andrew Kent's wounds

Andrew Kent's right leg was broken in five places by a falling boulder while he was climbing with his son in the Langdale Pikes in the Lake District in April.

The 53-year-old was rushed to hospital in Carlisle, where the broken bones were pinned back together in three operations.

But his leg was still in a bad condition and the wound became seriously infected.

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He was transferred to the Spire Alexandra Hospital in Chatham, where Anan Shetty, orthopaedic surgeon, performed the stem cell treatment: the first in Britain.

It involved removing stem cells from the bone marrow in Mr Kent's hip. The cells were then mixed with a collagen gel known as Cartfill.

This formed a paste that was smeared into the fractures. His leg was then placed in a metal cage, gently squeezing the broken bones back together.

Invented by orthopaedic surgeon Professor Seok Jung Kim from South Korea, the Cartfill collagen gel costs only a few hundred pounds for each use, much cheaper than other techniques.

Mr Shetty will continue the cartilage repair technique on 30 other patients before giving his results to the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). He hopes it will be used in NHS hospitals.

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