Kenneth Pridie
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's Athletics | ||
Representing England | ||
British Empire Games | ||
1934 London | Shot put |
Kenneth H. Pridie (born 8 March 1906) is an English athlete who competed in the 1930 British Empire Games and in the 1934 British Empire Games.
At the 1930 Empire Games he finished fourth in the discus throw event and sixth in the shot put competition.
Four years later he won the bronze medal in the shot put contest and finished sixth in the discus throw event at the 1938 Empire Games.
Kenneth Hampden Pridie was an orthopaedic surgeon. He studied at the University of Bristol. With a Fellowship from the Royal College of Surgeons of England he visited Böhler in Vienna, Watson-Jones in Liverpool and Girdlestone in Oxford. Twenty-eight years old he became a fracture surgeon at Bristol Royal Infirmary. He developed several devices for fracture treatment and was an eminent surgeon. Mr. Pridie is known for a articular cartilage repair technique - the Pridie drilling - where repair by fibrocartilage formation is stimulated by drilling small holes into the subchondral bone plate after surgical debridement of cartilage defects[1]. He died of a heart attack in 1963.
References
- ^ Pridie, K H. A method of resurfacing osteoarthritic knee joints. J Bone Joint Surg Br 1959;41-B(3):618-9
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