As it happened, Kemp experienced frustrations in similar fashion with others who have found the DePuy Hip to be problematic. "Unfortunately it never did feel right, it used to clunk and squeak and felt warm and I thought this doesn't seem right," he said in comments published in the May 19 issue of The Mercury, an Australian publication. "I went back and the surgeon said 'we'll give it a year,' but it started to hurt once we went back to Tasmania," said the 55-year-old.
And so it was that last July Kemp was outfitted with a replacement artificial hip—as it happened, one month prior to the recall of the DePuy Articular Surface Replacement system. While operating, surgeons discovered a black mass described as a toxic buildup resulting from the inability of the DePuy Hip Replacement to bond properly to Kemp's bone, as it was designed to do.
READ MORE DEPUY HIP REPLACEMENT LEGAL NEWS
Kemp, who lives in Tasmania and is part of a US DePuy lawsuit, is pictured in The Mercury leaning on his cane, his left leg twisted, his body hunched over in pain. He looks much older than his 55 years.
The DePuy Hip plaintiff said that when he had his blood tested a second time in February of this year, the toxicity levels had dropped "but were still above normal." He added that the surgeon who replaced his failed DePuy Hip Replacement noted the presence of a bunch of metal filings surrounding his failed hip joint.