Vivek P. Chadayammuri MD, Shuvalaxmi D. Haselton MS, Elizabeth Diaz PA-C, Roger H. Emerson MD
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) continues to grow exponentially, with a significant subset of patients requiring staged bilateral procedures. The optimal interval between staged procedures and effective strategies to minimize postoperative pain to enhance rehabilitation and mobility remain poorly understood.
Methods
160 consecutive patients undergoing staged bilateral TKA between August 2017 and January-2021 was retrospectively reviewed. Patients with a history of chronic opioid dependency were excluded. Baseline demographics, primary outcome measures, including visual analog scale (VAS) pain scores, perioperative opioid utilization (MME/day), and surgical satisfaction were evaluated. All patients had a minimum follow-up of 1-year-postoperatively. All univariate and multivariate statistical analyses were performed with significance given by P < .05.
Results
The mean interval between staged TKA was 8-weeks (standard deviation, 4.9-weeks). Preoperative VAS pain scores were significantly higher for the initial TKA, confirming that the more symptomatic knee was addressed first. Despite this, VAS pain scores were significantly increased following second-side TKA at 6-months postoperatively (P = .001). Multivariate analysis identified weekly interval duration between staged procedures as the single-most predictive factor of increased pain following second-side TKA (β = −0.106; P < .01). Female patients were increasingly susceptible to elevated pain levels following second-side TKA (β = 0.372; P = .057).
Conclusions
Postoperative pain increases after second-side TKA in staged-bilateral procedures, despite the more symptomatic side being addressed first. Our study identified weekly interval between staged procedures as the single-most predictive factor of pain, and female patients being predisposed to heightened pain following second-side TKA; implicating nociceptive pathways require weeks to normalize, necessitating gender-specific pain management and extended intervals.
期刊介绍:
Arthroplasty Today is a companion journal to the Journal of Arthroplasty. The journal Arthroplasty Today brings together the clinical and scientific foundations for joint replacement of the hip and knee in an open-access, online format. Arthroplasty Today solicits manuscripts of the highest quality from all areas of scientific endeavor that relate to joint replacement or the treatment of its complications, including those dealing with patient outcomes, economic and policy issues, prosthetic design, biomechanics, biomaterials, and biologic response to arthroplasty. The journal focuses on case reports. It is the purpose of Arthroplasty Today to present material to practicing orthopaedic surgeons that will keep them abreast of developments in the field, prove useful in the care of patients, and aid in understanding the scientific foundation of this subspecialty area of joint replacement. The international members of the Editorial Board provide a worldwide perspective for the journal''s area of interest. Their participation ensures that each issue of Arthroplasty Today provides the reader with timely, peer-reviewed articles of the highest quality.