The total number of primary and revision total knee arthroplasties performed in the United States is projected to increase dramatically during the next several decades. Population growth, the increasing use of arthroplasty, and changing demographic patterns interact synergistically toward these projections. In addition to an overall increase in the total number of surgical procedures, it is expected that the proportion of infections and revisions will increase. Publications focusing on future epidemiologic trends in knee arthroplasty are critical for driving future economic and public health policies.
Kurtz et al.1 projected the expected number of primary and revision hip and knee arthroplasty procedures in the United States from 2005 to 2030. They utilized Nationwide Inpatient Sample data for the years 1990 to 2003 as well as United States Census Bureau data to formulate a model for projecting the number of cases per year. The projection model, taking both surgical prevalence and population data into consideration, predicted a 673% increase in primary total knee arthroplasty to a total of 3.48 million procedures in 2030. Also projected was a 601% increase in revision total knee arthroplasty to a total of 268,000 procedures in 2030. The authors suggested that this massive increase in projected knee arthroplasty procedures will require additional surgeons, improved surgical efficiency, and increased economic resources.
Kurtz et al.2, in a separate study, quantified the expected future clinical and economic burdens imposed by infections and revisions in patients managed with arthroplasty. Again, the Nationwide Inpatient Sample data along with United States Census Bureau data were used. The authors projected that, from 2005 to 2030, the number of infections after revision total knee arthroplasty will increase from 6400 to 175,500. In comparison, the number of infections after revision total hip arthroplasty will increase from 3400 to 46,000. Additionally, the authors projected that the proportion of revision total knee arthroplasty performed specifically for the treatment of a deep infection will increase from 16.8% in 2005 to 65.5% in 2030. The economic burden resulting from these projections is a 450% increase in hospital charges and a 160% increase in surgical charges from 2005 to 2015 for revision total knee arthroplasty.
Petterson et al.3 studied the impact of osteoarthritis on male and female candidates for knee arthroplasty. A variety of strength and function scores, including the Short Form-36 and Knee Outcome Survey scores, were used to compare healthy patients of both sexes as well as arthroplasty candidates of both sexes. The authors found that, in addition to the expected baseline differences between healthy patients of both sexes, there was an even larger difference between arthroplasty candidates of both sexes. They concluded that women either are more adversely affected by arthritis or are further along in the disease process before considering arthroplasty. Considering that the outcomes of total knee arthroplasty are related to preoperative strength and function, the authors also suggested that earlier surgical consideration may result in improved total knee arthroplasty outcomes for women.
Fehring et al.4 studied the epidemiology of obesity and its relationship to total knee arthroplasty. The authors retrospectively reviewed the body mass index for patients managed with total knee arthroplasty at their institution in 1990, 1995, 2000, and 2005 and compared these data with general population data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. From 1990 to 2005, the proportion of obese patients undergoing total joint arthroplasty at their institution increased from 30% to 52%. In contrast, regional obesity rates during the same time only increased from about 12% to about 22%. The authors also found that, from 1990 to 2005, physician reimbursement for total knee arthroplasty decreased 59% in inflation-adjusted dollars. Identifying the relationship between obesity and the need for total knee arthroplasty is an important factor when considering public health policy and also may prove to be important in the evaluation of physician reimbursement.
While unicompartmental knee arthroplasty offers both the possibility of a more rapid recovery than total knee arthroplasty does as well as a conservative approach to the treatment of knee arthritis by virtue of the preservation of the cruciate ligaments and the maintenance of the non-arthritic compartments, universal endorsement of unicompartmental knee arthroplasty has been tempered by concerns about inferior long-term outcomes and the inherent difficulties of performing the surgery accurately.
Mullaji et al.5 assessed functional recovery after 100 consecutive quadriceps-sparing medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty procedures. Inclusion criteria included isolated medial joint line tenderness, isolated medial compartment radiographic changes, an intact anterior cruciate ligament, a flexion deformity of <10°, a correctable varus deformity of <15°, and a body mass index of <30. The mean patient age was fifty-nine years, 31% of the patients were male, and the mean body mass index was 27. Patients younger than seventy years of age received the Oxford mobile-bearing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (Biomet, Warsaw, Indiana), whereas older patients received the Preservation fixed-bearing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (DePuy, Warsaw, Indiana). The average hospital stay was 2.1 days, the average time to unassisted walking was 4.3 days, and 95% of the patients could ascend and descend stairs by the second postoperative day. At three months, the mean knee flexion was 139°, with no flexion contractures of >5°. The radiographic results were satisfactory, and there were no reported wound-healing complications, thromboembolic events, or infections.
Sah and Scott6 reported on the five-year results of forty-eight lateral unicompartmental knee arthroplasty procedures that had been performed through a medial parapatellar approach by a single surgeon. Inclusion criteria included clinical and radiographic changes isolated to the lateral compartment, a flexion contracture of <10°, and a valgus deformity of <10°. Intraoperatively, the states of the patella and anterior cruciate ligament were evaluated for inclusion as well. A variety of lateral unicompartmental knee arthroplasty implants were used. The mean age was sixty-one years, and 80% of patients were female. At a mean of five years, there had been no revisions or soft-tissue complications. All patients with osteoarthritis had an excellent result. Knee and function scores were inferior when the preoperative etiology was posttraumatic arthritis as opposed to osteoarthritis. The authors emphasized the advantages of a medial parapatellar approach, including the ability to inspect the other joint compartments carefully.
Although several studies have demonstrated ten-year survival rates of >90% after medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, there remains a concern that certain designs or populations may experience unacceptably high early failure rates. Mariani et al.7 described their early results after thirty-nine medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasties that had been performed with use of a single design (Preservation) from 2002 to 2004. At nine to twelve months, 38% of the arthroplasties had failed as a result of femoral loosening. Failure did not correlate with any patient or surgery-related factors. The authors hypothesized that, in flexion, edge loading of the tibial component on the posterior condyle of the femoral component exerted an anterior force pushing the femoral component off of the femur as evidenced radiographically.
Currently, there is mixed enthusiasm for minimally-invasive approaches and techniques, and there is general agreement that the size of the skin incision has little physiologic benefit on early or long-term outcomes after knee replacement.
Kolisek et al.8 conducted a prospective, randomized, multicenter study of eighty total knee arthroplasties in which they compared the early results of standard and mini-incision approaches. Patients were divided into groups on the basis of the length of the skin incision, with patients with an incision of <13 cm being placed in the minimal-incision group. The midvastus arthrotomy was used for the minimal-incision group, whereas a combination of approaches was used in the standard-incision (control) group. There were no significant differences between groups in terms of early postoperative scores or blood loss. However, there were four wound complications in the mini-incision group, compared with one in the standard-incision group. It is clear from that study that the length of the skin incision has very little effect on postoperative recovery or blood loss after total knee arthroplasty. The use of smaller incisions may actually compromise wound-healing. If there is a true benefit from minimally-invasive surgery, it likely lies more specifically in the deep dissection of the knee.
King et al.9 conducted a retrospective review comparing standard and quadriceps-sparing total knee arthroplasty, with an emphasis on early outcomes and the surgical learning curve. The first 100 quadriceps-sparing total knee arthroplasties were compared with forty-five standard total knee arthroplasties that were performed by one high-volume surgeon. The surgeon did not evert the patella or dislocate the tibia in the quadriceps-sparing group. There were no differences between the groups in terms of the physical therapy protocol. The quadriceps-sparing group had a shortened mean hospital stay (2.8 compared with 3.7 days), a higher proportion of discharges to home (95% compared with 33%), less narcotic use, and a higher rate of walking without assistive devices at two and six weeks after surgery. The authors specifically stated that no special efforts were made for the postoperative care of the patients in the quadriceps-sparing group. However, a learning curve was noted with respect to tourniquet times and the accuracy of patellar resection, both of which improved through the course of the study. No complications or radiographic outliers were observed in the quadriceps-sparing group. No data were provided regarding intermediate-term outcomes.
Huang et al.10 retrospectively studied their early results after quadriceps-sparing total knee arthroplasty and compared the results with those for a matched group of thirty-five patients who had been managed with a standard approach with a medial parapatellar arthrotomy. The greatest benefit was realized within the first two postoperative weeks, with the quadriceps-sparing group having significantly improved quadriceps strength and range of motion as well as less pain in comparison with the standard total knee arthroplasty group. However, the quadriceps-sparing group had increased tourniquet times (mean, 122 compared with fifty-five minutes) and a higher number of radiographic outliers of implant alignment. The authors recommended the use of minimally invasive techniques to decrease the morbidity after total knee arthroplasty but warned the surgeon of potential difficulties associated with the learning curve.
Tanavalee et al.11 reported on a prospective series of total knee arthroplasties in which the patients were divided into three groups on the basis of the length of the medial arthrotomy proximal to the patella (1, 2, and 3 cm). All other patient care-related factors, including anesthesia, physical therapy, and pain management protocols, were identical among the groups. The authors found that although range of motion and Knee Society scores were similar between the groups, patients who had the longer arthrotomy (3 cm proximal to the patella) exhibited a significant early delay in time to walking and straight-leg raising. Walter et al.12 performed a randomized prospective study of 122 consecutive total knee arthroplasties to study the effect of patellar eversion on early function and discharge. One surgeon used a midvastus arthrotomy, with or without patellar eversion, whereas another surgeon used either a midvastus or a parapatellar approach without patellar eversion. The only significant difference between the groups was an earlier time to straight-leg raising for the patients managed with a midvastus approach without patellar eversion. The authors recommended avoidance of patellar eversion during total knee arthroplasty.
Flören et al.13 also studied the impact of patellar eversion in a retrospective review comparing minimally-invasive and standard total knee arthroplasty. Seventy-four total knee arthroplasties that had been performed through a mini-midvastus approach without patellar eversion were compared with fifty-seven total knee arthroplasties that had been performed through a medial parapatellar approach with patellar eversion. The authors found a lower rate of patellar tendon shortening and patella baja in the group that had not undergone patellar eversion during surgery. The increased rate of patella baja in the standard-approach group (37% compared with 12%) was correlated with increased pain and decreased flexion at one year after surgery.
The ongoing debate about the differences between the midvastus and subvastus surgical approaches has also led to a number of important studies. Berth et al.14 performed a randomized prospective study of twenty patients undergoing bilateral simultaneous total knee arthroplasty, with the procedure on one side being performed through a subvastus approach and the procedure on the contralateral side being performed through a midvastus approach. At three and six months, there was no difference in the maximal voluntary activation of the quadriceps muscles between extremities. However, limbs in the subvastus group exhibited a higher level of pain until six months after surgery. Kelly et al.15, in a prospective randomized study of forty-two total knee arthroplasties, compared a standard medial parapatellar approach with a vastus-splitting approach. At six months and five years, there were no functional differences between the groups, although there was a significant increase in the frequency of lateral releases in the standard-approach group. Although electromyographic changes were found in 43% of the knees in the vastus-splitting group, there were no functional consequences of these findings. Furthermore, these electromyographic changes were completely reversed in patients who had had a blunt vastus dissection when studied at five years. These studies indicate that a midvastus or vastus-splitting approach does not lead to a functionally important injury to the vastus medialis muscle.
Prophylaxis against venous thromboembolism after total joint arthroplasty continues to be a source of contention, particularly as hospital and nationwide initiatives and protocols are being implemented. The most referenced recommendation, by the American College of Chest Physicians, is thought by many joint arthroplasty surgeons to be based on older data that do not give due emphasis to the complications that may result from anticoagulation. Given the recent advances in rapid recovery protocols, early ambulation, minimally-invasive techniques, and risk-identification protocols, the selection of chemoprophylaxis after total knee arthroplasty is being reexamined.
In May 2007, the Board of Directors of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons approved a clinical guideline on the prevention of symptomatic pulmonary embolism in patients after joint arthroplasty. This guideline provides evidence-based statements that hinge on the stratification of patients according to the risk of pulmonary embolism and the risk of major bleeding. A summary of the statements can be found at .
Burnett et al.26 prospectively evaluated the American College of Chest Physicians 1A protocol for Lovenox (enoxaparin) in a study of 290 consecutive patients managed with total hip arthroplasty or total knee arthroplasty. They found that a ten-day course of Lovenox resulted in major complications in 9% of the patients, including a 5.1% rate of prolonged hospitalization for wound drainage, a 4.7% rate of readmission, a 3.8% rate of symptomatic deep-vein thrombosis, and a 3.4% rate of reoperation for the treatment of wound complications. These values were highly unfavorable compared with the authors' own historical controls who had been managed with warfarin for anticoagulation. The authors discontinued recruitment of additional patients, terminated the study because of concerns regarding the complications, and considered their outcomes to be a failure of the 1A protocol for Lovenox recommended by the American College of Chest Physicians.
Dorr et al.27 reported the results of a retrospective study evaluating a multimodal approach to prophylaxis against thromboembolism in patients managed with hip and knee arthroplasty. Patient risk factors were used to stratify patients into treatment groups. Factors that designated a patient as being at high risk included a history of a venous thromboembolic event that had occurred within the previous five years, congestive heart failure that was classified as Class II or III according to the system of the New York Heart Association, atrial fibrillation with cardiac disease and the use of Coumadin (warfarin) preoperatively, recent surgery for the treatment of malignant disease or current adjuvant drug treatment, and thrombophilia (including factor-V Leiden, prothrombin disorders, protein-C and S deficiency, antithrombin disorders, or hypercoagulability states). Of 970 consecutive patients, 856 were considered low-risk and were managed with aspirin, dipyridamole, or clopidogrel bisulfate and limb-compression devices. One hundred and fourteen patients were classified as high-risk and were managed with warfarin or low-molecular-weight heparin and intermittent calf compression. All patients had an ultrasound Doppler study performed before discharge and were mobilized within twenty-four hours after surgery. There were no significant differences between the high and low-risk groups with regard to pulmonary embolism or symptomatic deep-vein thrombosis. However, wound hematomas were only found in patients receiving warfarin or low-molecular-weight heparin. The authors recommended this multimodal approach as a method for protecting patients from venous thromboembolism while minimizing the risks of anticoagulation.
In the study by Brooks et al.28, 224 patients who underwent total knee arthroplasty with use of spinal anesthesia, intermittent compression stockings, and postoperative treatment with low-molecular-weight heparin were compared with 157 patients who underwent a total knee arthroplasty with an indwelling epidural catheter for pain control, intermittent compression stockings, and no postoperative chemoprophylaxis. Monitoring at three days with venous ultrasound revealed no significant differences between the groups with regard to the prevalence of deep-vein thrombosis, with about 3% of the patients in both groups having a positive study demonstrating either proximal or distal thrombi. Pearse et al.29 conducted a retrospective study to compare the rates of deep-vein thrombosis in patients with and without early mobilization after total knee arthroplasty. All patients were managed with low-molecular-weight heparin and compression stockings. The prevalence of deep-vein thrombosis in patients managed with early mobilization (within twenty-four hours) was 1%, compared with 28% in patients who were mobilized on the second postoperative day. There was a thirtyfold decrease in the risk of deep-vein thrombosis when patients were mobilized within the first twenty-four hours. This raises a question about whether early mobilization has a greater prophylactic effect against thromboembolism than chemoprophylaxis does after total knee arthroplasty.
Just as surgical techniques and implants continue to be refined for improved function and survival after total knee arthroplasty, so have the understanding and treatment of complications advanced. The diagnosis and treatment of infection continues to dominate the literature on complications after total knee arthroplasty. However, there have also been substantial refinements of our understanding of patellofemoral complications and stiffness after total knee arthroplasty.
Parvizi et al.44 retrospectively reviewed the local and systemic complications in 1636 patients within six weeks after primary unilateral hip or knee replacement. Among the 104 major, life-threatening complications, there were twenty-five pulmonary emboli, fourteen cases of acute renal failure, thirty-three cases of tachyarrhythmia, and ten cases of pulmonary edema or heart failure. Ninety percent of the complications occurred within four days after surgery. Although age, obesity, and comorbidities were predictors of these complications, 58% of the patients who had a major complication had no predisposing factors. The authors cautioned against early hospital discharge after joint arthroplasty. Restrepo et al.45 performed a meta-analysis of eighteen selected publications involving 27,807 patients to analyze the relative risks of simultaneous bilateral total knee arthroplasty. The authors found a higher prevalence of pulmonary embolism (odds ratio, 1.8), cardiac complications (odds ratio, 2.5), and mortality (odds ratio, 2.2) in association with simultaneous bilateral total knee arthroplasty. Staged bilateral total knee arthroplasty had similar rates of complications when compared with unilateral total knee arthroplasty. It is not clear how the time between staged procedures relates to risk, nor is it clear which intraoperative factors contribute to the increased risk associated with simultaneous bilateral total knee arthroplasty.
Fisher et al.46 identified seventy-one knees (from a group of 1024 primary total knee arthroplasties) that were stiff or painful at one year after the index procedure. This group was compared with a matched control group of 148 nonpainful knees with a well-functioning total knee replacement that had had a similar preoperative range of motion to identify patient-related factors that contribute to poor results after total knee arthroplasty. The authors identified female sex, a higher body mass index, previous knee surgery, disability status, diabetes mellitus, pulmonary disease, and depression as being significantly associated with the risk of having stiffness or pain at one year after surgery despite the presence of well-aligned, well-fixed components. The importance of patient-related factors to the eventual outcome of total knee arthroplasty is clear, and these factors should influence preoperative counseling of patients awaiting total knee arthroplasty. Patel et al.47 conducted a retrospective observational study of 1226 primary total knee arthroplasties to identify the risk factors for prolonged wound drainage after surgery. After considering pharmacological, surgical, and patient-related risk factors, the authors reported that increased drain output was the only identified risk factor for prolonged drainage and that obesity was the only identified risk factor for infection after total knee arthroplasty.
Although infection continues to be one of the more serious complications after total knee arthroplasty, advances in the diagnosis and treatment of infection have led to improved care. Bindelglass and Pellegrino48 studied the contribution of blood cultures to the management of a patient who has a fever after primary joint arthroplasty. Of 240 patients who had had a total knee arthroplasty, forty had a fever of >101°F (38.3°C) and were evaluated with blood cultures. Only one patient had a positive blood culture, and this was deemed to be a false-positive result without any resulting complication. The authors concluded that blood cultures have limited value in the evaluation of postoperative fevers after total knee arthroplasty. Barrack et al.49 retrospectively reviewed their experience with unexpected positive intraoperative cultures after revision total knee arthroplasty. In a group of 692 consecutive revision total knee arthroplasties, forty-one patients had unexpected positive cultures. Twenty-nine of these patients had only one positive culture in the absence of any other suspicion for infection, and twenty-four patients from that group were discharged without any additional treatment. At an average of four years, none of these twenty-four patients were found to have an infection. The authors concluded that, in the absence of any suspicion for infection, a single positive intraoperative culture does not mandate additional treatment after revision total knee arthroplasty.
Della Valle et al.50, in a study of ninety-four painful knees undergoing revision total knee arthroplasty, reported on the use of a uniform protocol for the evaluation of infection. The protocol involved determination of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (>30 mm/hr), determination of the C-reactive protein level (>10 mg/dL), perioperative synovial fluid aspiration, intraoperative frozen-section analysis (>10 cells per field), and culture. Only one of the forty-one patients who were diagnosed with infection had a negative erythrocyte sedimentation rate and a normal C-reactive protein level before revision. A synovial fluid white blood-cell count of >3000 had an accuracy of 99% for the detection of infection. The authors recommended screening patients for infection on the basis of the preoperative erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein level, followed by aspiration of the joint or intraoperative frozen-section analysis when the results of those two laboratory tests are elevated. Greidanus et al.51 prospectively evaluated the diagnostic utility of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein level tests in the assessment of infection before revision total knee arthroplasty. Of 151 knees undergoing revision total knee arthroplasty, forty-five were diagnosed with infection. Statistical analysis identified an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of =22.5 mm/hr and a C-reactive protein level of =13.5 mg/L as the optimal positivity criterion. This provides a cutoff at which sensitivity and specificity are optimized, producing the most accurate test results. The authors concluded that both the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (sensitivity, 0.93; specificity, 0.83) and the C-reactive protein level (sensitivity, 0.91; specificity, 0.86) are excellent tests for the detection of infection in patients with pain at the site of a total knee arthroplasty. The authors provided a complete description of test performance, including when the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein level are considered in isolation or together.
Mittal et al.52 studied the outcomes after two-stage reimplantation total knee arthroplasty when the original infecting organism was identified as methicillin-resistant staphylococcus. Thirty-seven patients were identified, each of whom had had a two-stage reimplantation with negative cultures at the time of reimplantation. Nine patients had a repeat infection, four with the same organism and five with a different organism. The duration of intravenous antibiotics, a history of previous surgery, and comorbidities were not found to be associated with reinfection. The authors recommended two-stage reimplantation even in the setting of antibiotic-resistant organisms. Freeman et al.53 retrospectively identified seventy-six patients who had undergone a two-stage reimplantation, with use of either static or articulating spacers, for the treatment of infection. The overall infection-eradication rate was 95% in the articulating spacer group and 92% in the static spacer group. There were no eventual differences in terms of pain scores after revision; however, patients managed with an articulating spacer had a 58% rate of good to excellent functional results, compared with a 36% rate in the static spacer group. The authors stated that the use of articulating spacers may lead to improved functional results after two-stage reimplantation for the treatment of infection.
A large number of studies have focused on the etiology and treatment of stiffness after total knee arthroplasty. The impact of flexion contractures was highlighted by Ritter et al.54, who evaluated the relationship between loss of extension and outcome in a study of 5622 total knee arthroplasties. As expected, preoperative flexion contracture and greater preoperative pain were risk factors for postoperative flexion contractures. Both hyperextension of >10° and flexion contractures were associated with the risk of a poor outcome. Keating et al.55 retrospectively evaluated 113 knees with an average flexion of 70° that had undergone manipulation with the patient under anesthesia at an average of ten weeks after total knee arthroplasty. At five years after manipulation, the average improvement in flexion was 35°, with no difference between patients who had undergone manipulation before and after twelve weeks. The authors recommended manipulation for the achievement of improvement in terms of pain and function in knees with =90° of flexion following total knee replacement. Namba and Inacio56 studied 102 patients who had undergone manipulation under anesthesia within ninety days after total knee arthroplasty and ninety-three patients who had undergone manipulation more than ninety days after total knee arthroplasty. Manipulation was found to improve the range of motion and function in both groups, although greater gains were observed in the early-manipulation group. The authors recommended manipulation for the treatment of stiffness after total knee arthroplasty, even if it was delayed beyond ninety days, although that may increase the risk of periprosthetic fracture or extensor mechanism rupture. Fehring et al.57 retrospectively evaluated the outcomes after revision total knee arthroplasty for the treatment of painful flexion contractures of >15°. Ten of the fourteen patients who were identified had complete resolution of the flexion contracture after revision, with improvement in range of motion and pain scores.
Ensini A, Catani F, Leardini A, Romagnoli M, Giannini S. Alignments and clinical results in conventional and navigated total knee arthroplasty. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2007;457:156-62.
This randomized, prospective study evaluated the clinical and radiographic results of conventional and navigated total knee arthroplasty in 120 patients. Long-limb radiographs were used preoperatively to determine the distal femoral resection angle in patients having conventional surgery. Postoperatively, long-limb radiographs and questionnaires were used to assess the results in both groups. The authors found that navigated total knee arthroplasty resulted in more accurate resection planes, with most improvements amounting to a few degrees. Additionally, navigated total knee arthroplasty reduced the number of cases of limb alignment of >3° from neutral (prevalence, 20% among patients managed with conventional total knee arthroplasty, as compared with 1.7% among patients managed with navigated total knee arthroplasty). At twenty-eight months of follow-up, there were no differences in clinical scores between patients managed with navigated and conventional total knee arthroplasty. However, given recent data as reported by Collier et al.30, it is theoretically possible that improvements in limb alignment will result in long-term improvement in polyethylene wear and possibly loosening.
Spencer JM, Chauhan SK, Sloan K, Taylor A, Beaver RJ. Computer navigation versus conventional total knee replacement: no difference in functional results at two years. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2007;89:477-80.
In this randomized, prospective study, navigated total knee arthroplasty was compared with conventional total knee arthroplasty in a group of seventy-one patients with two years of follow-up. A variety of clinical scoring systems, including the Knee Society score and the Oxford knee score, were used to compare thirty patients who had had conventional total knee arthroplasty with thirty patients who had had navigated total knee arthroplasty at two years postoperatively. The authors found that despite having improved radiographic alignment, the patients in the navigated total knee arthroplasty group did not exhibit improved clinical results at two years when compared with patients who had been managed with conventional jig-based total knee arthroplasty. Again, this study revealed no early benefit of navigated total knee arthroplasty, and long-term studies are needed to reveal any improvements in survivorship derived from the improvement in limb alignment.
Trampuz A, Piper KE, Jacobson MJ, Hanssen AD, Unni KK, Osmon DR, Mandrekar JN, Cockerill FR, Steckelberg JM, Greenleaf JF, Patel R. Sonication of removed hip and knee prostheses for diagnosis of infection. N Engl J Med. 2007;357:654-63.
This prospective trial was performed to evaluate the effect of implant sonication, following the removal of components, on the results of culture after revision or resection total knee arthroplasty. At the time of resection or revision arthroplasty, the implants from 331 patients were sonicated to dislodge the adherent bacterial biofilm from the implant surface. The sonicate-fluid, in addition to periprosthetic tissues, was then sent to the laboratory for standard culture for the acquisition of a microbiologic diagnosis. With use of standard nonmicrobiologic criteria for infection, it was found that the sonication technique was more sensitive than standard culture techniques (sensitivity, 78.5% compared with 60.8%; p < 0.001). In fourteen cases, the sonication technique identified a bacterial strain when standard culture techniques did not. The ability of implant sonication to identify a bacterial strain was most impressive in patients receiving two weeks of antibiotics immediately before surgery, with the sensitivity improving from 45% to 75%. The authors concluded that sonication of implants after revision or resection total knee arthroplasty is a more sensitive way to identify a periprosthetic infection. The success of this technique is likely due to the dislodging of bacterial biofilm from the implant surface.
Kim YH, Kim DY, Kim JS. Simultaneous mobile- and fixed-bearing total knee replacement in the same patients. A prospective comparison of mid-term outcomes using a similar design of prosthesis. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2007;89:904-10.
This randomized prospective study of 174 patients was performed to compare mobile and fixed-bearing total knee implants of the same design that were inserted into the same patient during simultaneous bilateral total knee arthroplasty. After an average of 5.6 years of follow-up, there were no significant differences in pain, function, range of motion, or knee scores (p > 0.05). There were no revisions for the treatment of osteolysis in either group, and radiographs did not reveal osteolysis in any knee. The authors concluded that at five years, there is no significant clinical or radiographic difference between mobile and fixed-bearing total knee arthroplasty. This study begs the question about whether the absence of short-term benefits warrants the use of a more expensive implant. Longer-term follow-up will be necessary to adequately answer the question.
Kim YH, Kim JS, Kim DY. Clinical outcome and rate of complications after primary total knee replacement performed with quadriceps-sparing or standard arthrotomy. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2007;89:467-70.
This randomized prospective study of 120 patients was performed to compare the early outcomes and complications related to standard and quadriceps-sparing arthrotomy during bilateral total knee arthroplasty. With the anesthetic protocol held constant, the authors found no difference in blood loss, knee scores, functional scores, pain scale scores, or range of motion. However, total knee arthroplasty through a quadriceps-sparing arthrotomy was associated with a longer operating time (95.6 compared with 89.5 minutes; p < 0.0001), a longer tourniquet time (62.8 compared with 54.5 minutes; p < 0.0001), and an increased rate of complications (13% compared with 6%; p < 0.0468). Complications included anterior femoral notching and medial epicondylar avulsion fracture in both groups. The authors concluded that the quadriceps-sparing approach to total knee arthroplasty has no clinical benefit but that it was associated with a higher rate of complications in their practice. This study raises questions about the routine use of the quadriceps-sparing techniques; however, it is important to know whether the surgeons had adequate experience with the quadriceps-sparing approach.
Minns Lowe CJ, Barker KL, Dewey M, Sackley CM. Effectiveness of physiotherapy exercise after knee arthroplasty for osteoarthritis: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. BMJ. 2007;335:812.
This meta-analysis of randomized controlled studies was performed to evaluate the clinical effect of physiotherapy after total knee arthroplasty. Five studies that qualified for inclusion in the meta-analysis were identified. Outcome measures included functional activities, walking, quality of life, range of motion, and strength. At three to four months after total knee arthroplasty, there was a small to moderate effect size for function after total knee arthroplasty. In addition, physiotherapy resulted in small improvements in range of motion and quality of life at three to four months postoperatively. By one year, these early benefits of physiotherapy were no longer evident. The authors concluded that physiotherapy exercises that are performed soon after total knee arthroplasty result in a short-term benefit for the patient. The short-term benefits of physiotherapy that were not clearly measured in the study included the benefits of gait training and feedback regarding progress and the achievement of milestones after total knee arthroplasty.
Burnett RS, Boone JL, McCarthy KP, Rosenzweig S, Barrack RL. A prospective randomized clinical trial of patellar resurfacing and nonresurfacing in bilateral total knee arthroplasty. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2007;464:65-72.
A randomized clinical trial was performed to compare the long-term differences between patellar resurfacing and no resurfacing during total knee arthroplasty. One-stage bilateral total knee arthroplasty was performed for thirty-two patients with use of the same cruciate-retaining prosthesis. At a minimum of ten years, all living patients were evaluated with regard to anterior knee pain, Knee Society scores, patellofemoral complications and revision rates, patellofemoral function, and patient preference. At the time of the most recent follow-up, there were no differences in range of motion, the Knee Society clinical rating score, revision rates, or anterior knee pain. When patients were questioned, 37% preferred the resurfaced side, 22% preferred the nonresurfaced side, and 41% had no preference between sides. There were three revisions for the treatment of patellofemoral complications, including two in the nonresurfaced group and one in the resurfaced group. The authors concluded that there was no significant difference between patellar resurfacing and no resurfacing at ten years. It is theoretically possible that a study with more patients and higher statistical power would reveal a significant difference between techniques.