The Aplio a450 is particularly well suited for specific and complex proce-dures, such as special injections to the nerves or deep structures.
The hip can be particularly challeng-ing to access, especially in larger patients. “The deeper you are, the more difficult it is to get images. But with this system I made big progress. Compared to other machines, the Canon offers very good quality in the hip and deep layers,” he said.
Dr. Schlegel can perform more examinations with the Aplio a450, for example in the shoulder, the ankle, the Achilles’ tendon or the plantaris and patellar tendons.
He also uses the Aplio to guide a number of infiltrations and injections to treat tendinitis or peri-tendinitis for partial tears of the tendons in the ankle or the hip.
Some very small tendons and struc-tures were nearly impossible to see with previous equipment, Dr. Schlegel explained: “It was very difficult to find the infrapatellar branch of saphenous nerve with the machine we had before. But we did find it with the Aplio a450. It’s especially good to image this structure.”
The most spectacular case he treated with the Aplio a450 was a patient with chronic knee pain who underwent a block of the infrapatellar nerve. “The patient was pain-free for the first time in two years. By the second injection, the pain disappeared. It was very impressive what we could achieve with ultrasound control on the Aplio a450,” he said.
So far, Dr. Schlegel is the only special-ist in his institution using the Aplio a450, but this might change soon as colleagues are starting to notice the system’s potential for their field as well.
“Some time ago, I had an emergency patient and needed to call Dr. Küpfer from our angiology department to examine the vessels,” Dr. Schlegel said. “He was so impressed by the quality of my machine that he now wants to get one as well.”