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Full Index

Procedures.

A complete index of the surgical procedures Mr Gormack performs — including trauma surgery beyond hip and knee — together with cross-references to the specialty pages.

In this index

13 procedures across hip (5), knee (7), and trauma (1) — plus three diagnostic / decision pathways.

Part 01

Hip
procedures.

Full descriptions of every hip procedure are on the Hip page. The index below jumps directly to each anchor.

H 01Total Hip ReplacementRead →
H 02Anterior Approach Hip ReplacementRead →
H 03Revision Hip SurgeryRead →
H 04Hip ArthroscopyRead →
H 05Proximal Hamstring RepairRead →

Part 02

Knee
procedures.

Full descriptions for each knee procedure live on the Knee page.

K 01Knee ArthroscopyRead →
K 02ACL ReconstructionRead →
K 03Total Knee Replacement (computer-navigated)Read →
K 04Robotic Knee ReplacementRead →
K 05Revision Knee ReplacementRead →
K 06Patella Stabilisation (MPFL · TTO)Read →
K 07High Tibial OsteotomyRead →

Part 03

Trauma
surgery.

Mr Gormack manages complex orthopaedic trauma at Middlemore Hospital and in private practice — including the corrective procedures detailed below.

Procedure T 01

Non-Union Surgery

Re-fixation of a fracture that has failed to heal — debridement of non-healing tissue, stable plate or nail fixation, and bone grafting to stimulate union.

Read condition →

Procedure T 02

Corrective Osteotomy

Realignment of a mal-united fracture — a calculated bone cut to restore correct alignment, rotation, or length, then stabilisation while healing proceeds.

Read condition →

Procedure T 03

Metalware Removal

Removal of plates, screws, nails, or wires from a healed fracture — usually a day-case procedure once the underlying fracture has consolidated.

Read condition →

Procedure T 04

Proximal Hamstring Repair

Cross-referenced under Hip Surgery

Repair of an acute hamstring tear at its pelvic attachment. Surgical repair restores approximately 90% of hamstring strength compared with approximately 50% for non-surgical management. The patient lies prone; a 10–15cm incision is made over the gluteal crease and the retracted tendon is sutured back to the ischial tuberosity with bone anchors. Operative time is 90 minutes to 4 hours depending on retraction.

Recovery begins with crutches and touch weight-bearing for the first two weeks, then a gradual increase in load and gentle physiotherapy. Full return to all activities takes six to twelve months.

Full description on the Hip page →

Begin

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Mr Gormack consults at four Auckland locations and accepts referrals from GPs and other health professionals.

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