|
Candidate for
BILATERAL
OPERATION?
(Operation on both knees)
Knee joint is a paired organ and one or both knees may be
affected by the disease.
If both knee joints show changes on X-rays and
only one knee joint is painful, stiff, and disturbs your
life, then only this knee joint should be operated on
if both knees are equally difficult, then both should be
operated on.
The surgery that replaces both damaged knee joints is
called bilateral total knee operation.
You should know that bilateral knee surgery is done
routinely and it presents one of the most spectacular successes of the total knee
replacement surgery.
This is so because two impaired knee joints cause
much more symptoms than twice the symptoms caused by one diseased knee joint. Patients
with both knee joints affected have no healthy leg to rely on!
Staged Total Knee Replacement.
The surgeon replaces your destructed knee joints one at a
time, at two separate operations, often several months apart. You will need two
hospital stays, two anesthesia and two rehabilitation periods. This is called Staged Total Knee Replacement.
Simultaneous Bilateral Total Knee Replacement.
If you have both knees equally painful and stiff, it is
possible to have both knees replaced with total knee prostheses during one operation
seance, under one anesthesia. The operations are followed by a single rehabilitation
period within one hospital stay. Such two simultaneous surgeries are called Simultaneous Bilateral Total Knee Replacement.
Are the results of Simultaneous
Total knee replacement equally good as the results of Staged Total knee replacement?
Both procedures produce equally good relief
of pain and equally good return of function in the operated knees
Should you take the chance?
What are the advantages of a
Simultaneous Total knee replacement?
You will have only one surgical "event", single
anesthesia, shorter hospital stay.
What are the risks of a
Simultaneous Total Knee replacement?
In comparison with staged procedure the risks with
Simultaneous TKR are:
trice increased risk of death during the 30 days period for
people > 70 years (Parvizi , 2001)
twice increased risk of complications, especially vascular
complications such as deep vein thrombosis (Ritter 1997)
much higher need (17 times) for banked blood with all
possible complications (Lane 1997)
three times increased risk of cardiopulmonary complications
twice increased length of the stay at the intensive
unit department
twice increased need for prolonged rehabilitation
higher rate of bone marrow emboli into the brain (Sulek
1999)
What are the advantages of a
Staged Total knee replacement
lower stress on cardiovascular system, less complications,
less risk for requiring allogenic (banked) blood
What are the disadvantages of a
Staged Total knee replacement
It requires two hospital stays and two anesthesia and it
delays return to full activity.
Who should have a
Simultaneous Bilateral Total Knee replacement?
The ideal candidate is a patient under 70 years of age
(some surgeons accept even older patients, up to 80 years), in good physical condition,
without cardiac, pulmonary or vascular diseases. Such patient should also have severe pain
in both knees that interferes with the activities of daily living. There should be signs
of knee joint damage on X-ray pictures of both knees.
Because there are significant risks associated with
Simultaneous Total knee replacement, a very careful evaluation of candidates is necessary.
The patients should also be informed about the risks associated with this procedure.
If you contemplate to have a Simultaneous Total knee
replacement you should discuss this procedure carefully with your surgeon
Should the
X-ray changes of the other knee alone decide the bilateral operation?
If you have one bad knee and one good knee and both
knees show X-ray signs of osteoarthritis, should you have both knees replaced at once?
- No. You should have total knee replacement only of that knee
joint which gives you pain and stiffness.
- You should not have bilateral total knee replacement only
because X-rays of both of your knees show osteoarthritic changes.
- There is, however, a 75 % chance that your
second symptomless knee (with apparent X-ray changes) will become painful
during the next five years.
Will the impairment
of the other knee recede after operation on one side?
It is possible, but it is not predictable.
It is no idea to wait too long with the operation of the other painful knee
- if both knee joints have severe flexion deformity (knees
that are stiff in bent position)
- in aged patients. In these patients a medical complication
may develop and prevent the operation of the other knee. An elderly patient, who was
suffering misery from bilateral knee impairment is able to function "normally"
in 2 to 3 weeks after bilateral replacement. The psychical state (depression) of these
patients often improves after their source of pain has been removed.
l(Links: www.rothmaninstitute.com/joints
)
WHO CANNOT HAVE A TOTAL KNEE SURGERY
(of one or both knees)
- Patients with recent (
arbitrary < 9 months) heart infarct and stroke
- Patients with uncontrolled diabetes, lung, kidney, or other
systemic disease
- Patients with ongoing or recent infection in the knee joint
area
- Patients with severe paralysis of muscles around the knee
- Patients with severe circulation problems (painful
claudicatio) in the extremity.
- Patients with severe skin damage in the front of the knee
joint
- Patients with open wounds in the lower leg.
Other reasons why surgeons may
abstain from operation
Many surgeons will hesitate to carry out total knee
replacement in
- badly motivated patients
- patients seeking financial or other gain from total knee
surgery
- overweight patients ( > 100 kg)
- persons with alcohol abuse
- people with dementia
(Mancuso
1996)
OTHER IMPORTANT FACTORS
There are other very important factors that
decide whether you should have total knee replacement at all and whether you will be
satisfied with the operation.
These factors include your age - you are
never too old but you may be too young (in the eyes of your surgeon) for a TKR surgery
For more information about this factor, please
visit the sections below:
Are
you too young to have a TKR?
References:
Lane et al. Clin Orthop 1997;345:106-12
Parvizi et al J Bone Joint Surg-Am, 2001; 83-A: 1157
-60)
Ritter et al Clin Orthop 1997;345:99-105)
Sulek et al Anesthesiology 1999;3:672-6)
Before you take any action, please read the Disclaimer
BACK to Total Knee Index/
NEXT to Are you too young
|