The Harrington Rod is one of the oldest and most proven forms of spinal instrumentation. It is used to straighten and stabilize the spine when curvature is greater than 60 degrees. It is an appropriate treatment for scoliosis.
Rod Harrington was born on December 30, 1957.
Rod Harrington was born on December 30, 1957.
Rod Harrington is 53 years old (birthdate: December 30, 1957).
Advantages of the Harrington rod are its relative simplicity of installation, the low rate of complications, and a proven record of reducing curvature of the spine.
Lightening does occasionally strike people with Harrington rods. This is just the nature of carrying around a metal medical rod.
Yes you can have an MRI with Harrinton rod in your lumbar spine. Harrington rods are made of titanium making it safe to enter an MRI Scanner.
The disadvantage is that, like Harrington rod instrumentation, the patient must wear a cast and a brace after surgery.
types of spinal instrumentation. Drummond instrumentation, also called Harri-Drummond instrumentation, uses a Harrington rod on the concave side of the spine and a Luque rod on the convex side.
Have you had surgery for your AIS and what was the procedure? I have AIS and had surgery in 1989 with a harrington rod, having pain due to the harrington rod Bowen therapy can be very beneficial to those prior or after surgery, I have this every week and the results have been very good, I have placed links to a webpage and to my blog so you can read about my progress
While it was simple in design, it required a long period of brace wearing after the operation, and did not allow segmental adjustment of correction.
Rod Janzen - rhythm guitar Steve Misamore - Drums Tim Sergent - Steel guitar, banjo Robbie Harrington - Bass
A "Harrington Rod" used to be placed into the spine to correct Scoliosis, the Harrington rod was used to straighten the spine, this instrument caused many problems and was stopped being used at the end of the late 80s - problems being a loss of lordosis and a condition called flatback syndrome. Surgeons now try to use pins and screws instead of one piece of metal down the whole spine.