06/15/2026
If I recommend robotic knee replacement, here's what that actually looks like from your side.
Before surgery, you'll have a CT scan of your knee. That scan goes into the Mako system, which builds a 3D virtual model of your specific joint, not a generic knee, yours. I use that model to plan exactly where the implant will go and how it will fit your anatomy before I ever make an incision.
In the operating room, the robot doesn't perform the surgery, I do. But it gives me real-time feedback throughout, making sure every step stays within the plan we built from your scan. If something shifts, I know immediately.
What that means for you is more accurate implant placement, better balance in the knee, and a recovery that's more predictable. You're not getting a one-size-fits-all procedure. You're getting a surgery that was planned around you.