LOS ANGELES, March 9 (Xinhua) -- A Los Angeles
surgeon will show 30 visiting orthopedic surgeons from China how he uses Global
Positioning Satellite (GPS) technology to guide him as he replaces knees, hips
or leg bones in patients, a spokeswoman said on Sunday.
; "The doctor (Lawrence Menendez) uses the satellites
to precisely measure legs and make sure they are even," said spokeswoman Sandra
Levy at the Medical Center of the University of Southern California in Los
Angeles.
Dr. Menendez delivered a speech on the new technique
last year in China, and invited the surgeons to stop here to see the pioneering
work demonstrated as they travel to an international conference later this week
in San Francisco.
On Monday morning, a 29 year-old man with bone cancer
will have his knee joint and eight inches of bone removed and replaced with a
synthetic internal prosthesis. Following that, a 64 year-old woman will get a
hip replacement.
In both cases, the Chinese doctors will observe how
data from GPS satellites orbiting 12,600 miles (about 20,160 kilometers) above
Los Angeles will help guide the doctor in his work, Levy said.