Knee Replacement

Knee replacement is one of the most common orthopaedic surgeries performed in the United States, and is only increasing due to the rise of patients being diagnosed with knee arthritis, and the improvement in the implant design, function, and longevity.  The goal of knee replacement is to improve patients quality of life, alleviate pain, and improve function. Knee replacement is used to alleviate symptoms in patients with knee osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, osteonecrosis, and post-traumatic arthritis.

Dr. Mosher is one of the top knee replacement surgeons in north Alabama, and performs both traditional total knee replacement and partial knee replacement, depending on the patient’s goals and level of degenerative changes. He also uses the traditional medial parapatellar approach and quad-sparing approaches to the knee.

The ultimate goal of knee replacement is getting patients to what they want to do without pain, so we will slowly release restrictions on patients, and will allow them to get back to running, cycling, rowing, playing competitive sports, heavy labor, and more if they desire. However, our goal is for ALL patients to be walking and climbing stairs withing hours of surgery. This early mobilization allows for rapid recovery and early discharge, which improves outcomes, patient satisfaction, and patient safety.

All patients will also be given a “multimodal” pain control regimen to control pain, while limiting the amount of harsh, narcotic pain medications to minimize medication-related complications and dependency.

We also may use robotic assistance or computer navigation during surgery to ensure that component placement is appropriate in an effort to boost patient satisfaction. While this technology continues to advance, it remains in its infancy. So, this is something that we will continue to monitor over coming years to improve patient outcomes. However, if patient’s desire robotic assistance, we are more than happy to perform these surgeries with a robot.

AAHKS link to videos of both a partial and total knee replacement (Link)

Common Questions

Risks, Benefits, and Alternatives

Benefits: Our goal is to give you a stable, well-functioning knee. We want you to get back doing the things you enjoy.  The potential benefits of TKA include: pain relief, improved function, improvement of range of motion, improved stability and activity level, and increased ability to do activities as desired. 

Risks: There are risks associated with TKA. The risks and our mitigation of those are listed below. The cumulative risk of any one of these is about 3-5%.

Infection/wound healing complications: We use prophylactic antibiotics, antiseptic solutions, advanced wound healing devices, and maintain sterile technique. However, the risk of infection is never 0%. If an infection occurs, you will need another surgery, IV antibiotics, and oral antibiotics.

Fracture: This can uncommonly occur with the usage of cementless components and final implant placement. Wewill  obtain an X-ray after surgery to ensure this did not occur. 

Implant Loosening: We place your implants using a variety of cemented and cementless techniques. Neither option is perfect. Thus, these uncommonly can loosen down the line. We will monitor this throughout the healing process.

Neurovascular Injury: TKA requires exposure for component placement, placing the nerves and blood vessels at slight risk. The tibial and peroneal nerves are the most common affected. Tibial nerve injury can lead to numbness, while peroneal nerve injury leads to a foot drop, both of which often improve on their own. The popliteal vessels are also at risk. All structures are protected by retractors during the surgery. You will also have superficial lateral knee numbness from the incision.

Extensor Mechanism Injury: The extensor mechanism (patella tendon, patella, and quadriceps tendon) can be scarred into place and stiff. We place retractors and obtain appropriate exposure to mitigate this risk.

Stiffness/Instability: These can occur with any knee surgery. We will get you into aggressive therapy to mitigate these risks, and monitor your progress for early intervention if needed.

Dissatisfaction: In TKA, the goal is to improve your knee function, but it may never be “perfect,” leading to some dissatisfaction.  Our goal is to give you the best functioning knee possible.

Pain: Infrequently, patients can have issues with pain after surgery. These tend to resolve, and we work to mitigate this via appropriate component placement and respecting the soft tissues.

Altered Gait: It will take time for your body to accommodate the new surgery and implant, and it can take some time for your muscles to accommodate, leading to a limp. This should improve with time.

Venous Thromboembolism (VTE): This includes DVT and pulmonary embolism. This risk is elevated after TKA. We give at least 1 baby aspirin twice daily for 4 weeks to prevent this.

Medical Complications: These include: heart attack, stroke, pneumonia, UTI, VTE, kidney injury, bleeding, even death. However, these are present with any surgery, and not specific to revision THA. The more common “medical complications” we manage are nausea/vomiting, narcotic intolerance, drug interactions, urinary retention, pain, etc, which can usually be managed over the phone.

Alternatives: Continue nonoperative management. This is a continuation of your current management, including: anti-inflammatories, physical therapy, bracing, and injections. These may be helpful in a short-term situation, but are not a long-term solution.

Unique Differenes with Partial (Unicompartmental) Knee Replacement

Overall, the partial knee replacement tends to have a higher functional capacity after surgery, with a expedited recovery in comparison to the total knee replacement. However, since only the diseased area is being replaced, there can be progression of arthritis in the other compartments of the knee leading to futher surgery to address these changes—thus partial knee replacement will always have a higher revision rate than total knee replacement.