Knee Replacement
Total Knee Replacement
If your knee is severely damaged by arthritis or injury, it may be hard
for you to perform simple activities such as walking or climbing stairs.
You may even begin to feel pain while you’re sitting or lying
down.
If medications, changing your activity level, and using walking supports
are no longer helpful, you may want to consider total knee replacement
surgery. By resurfacing your knee’s damaged and worn surfaces,
total knee replacement surgery can relieve your pain, correct your leg
deformity, and help you resume your normal activities.
One of the most important orthopaedic surgical advances of this century,
knee replacement was first performed in 1968. Improvements in surgical
materials and techniques since then have greatly increased its effectiveness.
About 267,000 total knee replacements are performed each year in the
United States. Whether you have just begun exploring treatment options
or have already decided with your orthopaedic surgeon to have total knee
replacement surgery, this booklet will help you understand more about
this valuable procedure.
How the Normal Knee Works

The knee is the largest joint in the body. Nearly normal knee function
is needed to perform routine everyday activities. The knee is made up
of the lower end of the thigh bone (femur), which rotates on the upper
end of the shin bone (tibia), and the knee cap (patella), which slides
in a groove on the end of the femur. Large ligaments attach to the femur
and tibia to provide stability. The long thigh muscles give the knee
strength. The joint surfaces where these three bones touch are covered
with articular cartilage, a smooth substance that cushions the bones
and enables them to move easily.
All remaining surfaces of the knee are covered by a thin, smooth tissue
liner called the synovial membrane. This membrane releases a special
fluid that lubricates the knee which reduces friction to nearly zero
in a healthy knee.
Normally, all of these components work in harmony. But disease or injury
can disrupt this harmony, resulting in pain, muscle weakness, and less
function.
Common Causes of Knee Pain and Loss of Knee Function
The most common cause of chronic knee pain and disability is arthritis.
Osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and traumatic arthritis are the
most common forms.
Osteoarthritis usually occurs after the age of 50
and often in an individual with a family history of arthritis. The
cartilage that cushions the bones of the knee softens and wears away.
The bones then rub against one another causing knee pain and stiffness.
Rheumatoid Arthritis is a disease in which the synovial membrane becomes
thickened and inflamed, producing too much synovial fluid which over-fills
the joint space. This chronic inflammation can damage the cartilage and
eventually cause cartilage loss, pain and stiffness.
Post Traumatic Arthritis can follow a serious knee injury. A knee fracture
or severe tears of the knee’s ligaments may damage the articular
cartilage over time, causing knee pain and limiting knee function.
Is Total Knee Replacement for You?
The decision whether to have total knee replacement surgery should be
a cooperative one between you, your family, your family physician,
and your orthopaedic surgeon. Your physician may refer you to an orthopaedic
surgeon for a thorough evaluation to determine if you could benefit
from this surgery.
Reasons that you may benefit from total knee replacement commonly include:
* Severe knee pain that limits your everyday activities, including walking,
going up and down stairs, and getting in and out of chairs. You may
find it hard to walk more than a few blocks without significant pain
and you may need to use a cane or walker.
* Moderate or severe knee pain while resting, either day or night.
* Chronic knee inflammation and swelling that doesn’t improve with
rest or medications.
* Knee deformity-a bowing in or out of your knee.
* Knee stiffness-inability to bend and straighten your knee.
* Failure to obtain pain relief from non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs. These medications, including aspirin and ibuprofen, often are
most effective in the early stages of arthritis. Their effectiveness
in controlling knee pain varies greatly from person to person. These
drugs may become less effective for patients with severe arthritis.
* Inability to tolerate or complications from pain medications.
* Failure to substantially improve with other treatments such as cortisone
injections, physical therapy, or other surgeries. Most patients who undergo
total knee replacement are age 60 to 80, but orthopaedic surgeons evaluate
patients individually. Recommendations for surgery are based on a patient’s
pain and disability, not age. Patients as young as age 16 and older than
90 have undergone successful total knee replacement.
The Orthopaedic
Evaluation
The orthopaedic evaluation consists of several components:
* A medical
history, in which your orthopaedic surgeon gathers information about
your general health and asks you about the extent of your knee pain and
your ability to function.
* A physical examination to assess your knee
motion, stability, and strength and overall leg alignment.
* X-rays to
determine the extent of damage and deformity in your knee.
* Occasionally
blood tests, an MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) or a bone scan may be
needed to determine the condition of the bone and soft tissues of your
knee.
Your orthopaedic surgeon will review the results of your evaluation with
you and discuss whether total knee replacement would be the best method
to relieve your pain and improve your function. Other treatment options
including medications, injections, physical therapy, or other types of
surgery also will be discussed and considered.
Your orthopaedic surgeon also will explain the potential risks and complications
of total knee replacement, including those related to the surgery itself
and those that can occur over time after your surgery.
Realistic Expectations About Knee Replacement Surgery
An important factor in deciding whether to have total knee replacement
surgery is understanding what the procedure can and can’t do.
More than 90 percent of individuals who undergo total knee replacement
experience a dramatic reduction of knee pain and a significant improvement
in the ability to perform common activities of daily living. But total
knee replacement won’t make you a super-athlete or allow you to
do more than you could before you developed arthritis.
Following surgery, you will be advised to avoid some types of activity
for the rest of your life, including jogging and high impact sports.

With normal use and activity, every
knee replacement develops some wear in its plastic cushion. Excessive
activity or weight may accelerate this
normal wear and cause the knee replacement to loosen and become painful.
With appropriate activity modification, knee replacements can last
for many years.
Preparing for Surgery

Medical Evaluation
If you decide to have total knee replacement surgery,
you may be asked to have a complete physical by your family physician
several weeks before surgery to assess your health and to rule out
any conditions that could interfere with your surgery.
Tests
Several tests, such as blood samples, a cardiogram, and a urine
sample may be needed to help your orthopaedic surgeon plan your surgery.
Preparing Your Skin and Leg
Your knee and leg should not have any skin
infections or irritation.Your lower leg should not have any chronic
swelling. Contact your orthopaedic surgeon prior to surgery if either
is present
for a program to best prepare your skin for surgery.
Blood Donation
You may be advised to donate your own blood prior to the
surgery. It will be stored in the event you need blood after your surgery.
Medications
Tell your orthopaedic surgeon about the medications you are
taking. He or she will tell you which medications you should stop taking
and which you should continue to take before surgery.
Dental Evaluation
Although the incidence of infection after knee replacement
is very low, an infection can occur if bacteria enter your bloodstream.
Treatment of significant dental diseases (including tooth extractions
and periodontal work) should be considered before your total knee replacement
surgery.
Urinary Evaluations
A preoperative urological evaluation should be considered
for individuals with a history of recent or frequent urinary infections.
For older men with prostate disease, required treatment should be considered
prior to knee replacement surgery.
Social Planning
Though you will be able to walk on crutches or a walker
soon after surgery, you will need help for several weeks with such tasks
as cooking, shopping, bathing, and doing laundry. If you live alone,
your surgeon’s office and a social worker or a discharge planner
at the hospital can help you make advance arrangements to have someone
assist you at home. They also can help you arrange for a short stay in
an extended care facility during your recovery, if this option works
best for you.
Home Planning
Several
suggestions can make your home easier to navigate during your recovery.
Consider:
* Safety bars or a secure handrail in your shower or bath.
* Secure handrails along your stairways.
* A stable chair for your early recovery with a firm seat cushion (height
of 18-20 inches), a firm back, two arms, and a footstool for intermittent
leg elevation.
* A toilet seat riser with arms, if you have a low toilet.
* A stable shower bench or chair for bathing.
* Removing all loose carpets and cords.
* A temporary living space on the same floor, because walking up or down
stairs will be more difficult during your early recovery.
Your Surgery

You will most likely be admitted to the hospital on the day of your surgery.
After admission, you will be evaluated by a member of the anesthesia
team. The most common types of anesthesia are general anesthesia, in
which you are asleep throughout the procedure, and spinal or epidural
anesthesia, in which you are awake but your legs are anesthetized. The
anesthesia team with your input will determine which type of anesthesia
will be best for you. The procedure itself takes about two hours. Your
orthopaedic surgeon will remove the damaged cartilage and bone and then
position the new metal and plastic joint surfaces to restore the alignment
and function of your knee.
Many different types of designs and materials are currently used in total
knee replacement surgery. Nearly all of them consist of three components:
the femoral component (made of a highly polished strong metal), the tibial
component (made of a durable plastic often held in a metal tray), and
the patellar component (also plastic).
After surgery, you will be moved to the recovery room, where you will
remain for one to two hours while your recovery from anesthesia is monitored.
After you awaken, you will be taken to your hospital room.
Your Stay
in the Hospital
You will most likely stay in the hospital for several days. After surgery,
you will feel some pain, but medication will be given to you to make
you feel as comfortable as possible. Walking and knee movement are important
to your recovery and will begin immediately after your surgery.
To avoid lung congestion after surgery, you should breathe deeply and
cough frequently to clear your lungs.
Your orthopaedic surgeon may prescribe one or more measures to prevent
blood clots and decrease leg swelling, such as special support hose,
inflatable leg coverings (compression boots), and blood thinners.
To restore movement in your knee and leg, your surgeon may use a knee
support that slowly moves your knee while you are in bed. The device,
called a continuous passive motion (CPM) machine, decreases leg swelling
by elevating your leg and improves your venous circulation by moving
the muscles of your leg.
Foot and ankle movement is encouraged immediately following surgery to
also increase blood flow in your leg muscles to help prevent leg swelling
and blood clots. Most patients begin exercising their knee the day after
surgery. A physical therapist will teach you specific exercises to strengthen
your leg and restore knee movement to allow walking and other normal
daily activities soon after your surgery.
Possible Complications After Surgery
The complication rate following total knee replacement is low. Serious
complications, such as a knee joint infection, occur in less than 2
percent of patients. Major medical complications, such as heart attack
or stroke occur even less frequently. Chronic illnesses may increase
the potential for complications. Although uncommon, when these complications
occur they can prolong or limit your full recovery.
Blood clots in the leg veins are the most common complication of knee
replacement surgery. Your orthopaedic surgeon will outline a prevention
program, which may include periodic elevation of your legs, lower leg
exercises to increase circulation, support stockings, and medication
to thin your blood.
Discuss your concerns thoroughly with your orthopaedic surgeon prior
to surgery.
Your Recovery at Home
The success of your surgery also will depend on how well you follow your
orthopaedic surgeon’s instructions at home during the first few
weeks after surgery.
Wound Care
You will have stitches or staples running along your wound
or a suture beneath your skin on the front of your knee. The stitches
or staples will be removed several weeks after surgery. A suture beneath
your skin will not require removal.
Avoid soaking the wound in water until the wound has thoroughly sealed
and dried. A bandage may be placed over the wound to prevent irritation
from clothing or support stockings.
Diet
Some loss of appetite is common for several weeks after surgery.
A balanced diet, often with an iron supplement, is important to promote
proper tissue healing and restore muscle strength. Activity Exercise
is a critical component of home care, particularly during the first few
weeks after surgery. You should be able to resume most normal activities
of daily living within three to six weeks following surgery. Some pain
with activity and at night is common for several weeks after surgery.
Your activity program should include:
* A graduated walking program to
slowly increase your mobility, initially in your home and later outside.
* Resuming other normal household activities, such as sitting and standing
and walking up and down stairs.
* Specific exercises several times a day to restore movement and strengthen
your knee. You probably will be able to perform the exercises without
help, but you may have a physical therapist help you at home or in a
therapy center the first few weeks after surgery.
Driving usually begins
when your knee bends sufficiently so you can enter and sit comfortably
in your car and when your muscle control provides adequate reaction
time for braking and acceleration. Most individuals resume driving
about four
to six weeks after surgery.
Avoiding Problems
After Surgery
Blood Clot Prevention Follow your orthopaedic surgeon’s instructions
carefully to minimize the potential of blood clots which can occur during
the first several weeks of your recovery. Warning signs of possible blood
clots in your leg include:
* Increasing pain in your calf.
* Tenderness or redness above or below your knee.
* Increasing swelling in your calf, ankle, and foot.
Warning signs
that a blood clot has travelled to your lung include:
* Sudden increased
shortness
of breath.
* Sudden onset of chest pain.
* Localized chest pain with coughing. Notify your doctor immediately
if you develop any of these signs.
Preventing Infection The most common causes of infection following
total knee replacement surgery are from bacteria that enter the bloodstream
during dental procedures, urinary tract infections, or skin infections.
These bacteria can lodge around your knee replacement and cause an
infection.
Following your surgery, you should take antibiotics prior to dental
work or any surgical procedure that could allow bacteria to enter
your bloodstream.
Warning signs of a possible knee replacement infection are:
* Persistent
fever (higher than 100 degrees orally).
* Shaking chills.
* Increasing redness, tenderness, or swelling of the knee wound.
* Drainage from the knee wound.
* Increasing knee pain with both activity and rest. Notify your doctor
immediately if you develop any of these signs.

Avoiding Falls
A fall during the first few weeks after surgery can damage
your new knee and may result in a need for further surgery. Stairs
are a particular hazard until your knee is strong and mobile. You should
use a cane, crutches, a walker, hand rails, or someone to help you
until you have improved your balance, flexibility, and strength.
Your surgeon and physical therapist will help you decide what assistive
aides will be required following surgery and when those aides can safely
be discontinued. How Your New Knee is Different
You may feel some numbness in the skin around your incision. You also
may feel some stiffness, particularly with excessive bending activities.
Improvement of knee motion is a goal of total knee replacement, but restoration
of full motion is uncommon. The motion of your knee replacement after
surgery is predicted by the motion of your knee prior to surgery. Most
patients can expect to nearly fully straighten the replaced knee and
to bend the knee sufficiently to go up and down stairs and get in and
out of a car. Kneeling is usually uncomfortable, but it is not harmful.
Occasionally, you may feel some soft clicking of the metal and plastic
with knee bending or walking. These differences often diminish with time
and most patients find these are minor, compared to the pain and limited
function they experienced prior to surgery.
Your new knee may activate metal detectors required for security in airports
and some buildings. Tell the security agent about your knee replacement
if the alarm is activated.

After surgery, make sure you also do the following:
* Participate in
regular light exercise programs to maintain proper strength and mobility
of your new knee.
* Take special precautions to avoid falls and injuries. Individuals who
have undergone total knee replacement surgery and suffer a fracture may
require more surgery.
* Notify your dentist that you had a knee replacement. You should be
given antibiotics before all dental surgery for the rest of your life.
* See your orthopaedic surgeon periodically for a routine follow-up examination
and X-rays, usually once a year.

Your orthopaedic surgeon is a medical doctor with extensive training
in the diagnosis and nonsurgical and surgical treatment of the musculoskeletal
system, including bones, joints, ligaments, tendons, muscles, and nerves.
This brochure has been prepared by the American Academy of Orthopaedic
Surgeons and is intended to contain current information on the subject
from recognized authorities. However, it does not represent official
policy of the Academy and its text should not be construed as excluding
other acceptable viewpoints. Persons with questions about a medical condition
should consult a physician who is informed about the condition and the
various modes of treatment available. 35M0998 Product No. 03057