Company born from capstone design gets FDA clearance for next generation surgical smart tool

Thursday, January 28, 2016

, a medical technology company co-founded by À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Engineering graduates, announced today that it has been givenÌýUS Food and Drug Administration clearance for the next generation of - the company's flagship productÌýinitially developed as a Capstone Design ±è°ù´ÇÂá±ð³¦³Ù.Ìý

intellijoint HIPâ„¢ - a miniature surgical smart tool used by surgeons to improve accuracy during hip replacement surgery was developed at the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ by Armen Bakirtzian (University of Toronto graduate), Richard Fanson (BASc mechatronics '08, MASc, electrical and computer engineering '10) and Andre Hladio (BASc mechatronics '08, MASc, electrical and computer engineering '10). After graduation, the team co-founded Intellijoint Surgical Inc.,Ìýobtained a Health Canada license and FDA clearance, and saw the first surgery performed using the device in 2015.

Three grad of ECE

Since then, intellijointÌý±á±õ±Êâ„¢ has been used in hundreds of procedures across North America and the company looks to expand following the launch of the newest upgradeÌýof intellijointÌý±á±õ±Êâ„¢; which now provides cup position (inclination andÌýanteversion), in addition to the original leg length, offset, and change in hip center measurements.

intellijointÌý±á±õ±Êâ„¢Ìýcan assist in the prevention of recurrent instability, hip dislocation and leg length discrepancy and may expedite decision-making and improve accuracy in achieving preoperative planned targets, ultimately improving patient satisfaction and healthcare economics.

Intellijoint's core technology represents the latest in miniature 3D surgical measurement within the sterile field.ÌýintellijointÌý±á±õ±Êâ„¢Ìýis the first of many products to benefit from this new novel core technology.ÌýIt is safe, fast, accurate, and precise.ÌýintellijointÌýHIP's compatibility with the majority of implant vendors, paired with its cost-effectiveness, opens accessibility of computer-assisted surgery to all orthopaedic surgeons.