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Your Patient Is Not Happy with Their Knee or Hip Replacement. What’s Next?

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EDITORIAL CALENDAR

EDITORIAL CALENDAR

By George J. Haidukewych, MD

According to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, more than 790,000 knee and 450,000 hip replacements are performed in the United States each year. While these numbers declined somewhat over the past year due to obvious reasons and events related to the pandemic, experts project a significant upward trend in medically indicated joint replacement surgeries over the next 10 years.

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More than 85-90 percent of patients who undergo total knee or hip arthroplasty (TKA/THA) surgery experience a favorable outcome, with a decrease in pain, an increase in mobility and an overall improved quality of life. And with advances in technology, patients can expect their replacement joint to function well for 20 years or longer. But not all joint replacement surgeries are successful. Complications and failures can occur, and patients who expected dramatic pain relief and function after a knee or hip replacement may present with persistent pain, as well as considerable frustration and unhappiness.

About a third of patients will still have some aches and pains following knee or hip replacement. Early problems can be due to technical factors involving the surgery, inadequate rehab, or more serious problems such as infection or loosening. Problems can also occur years after surgery as the ceramics and plastics start to wear through. A joint replacement that had previously been functioning well for several years can suddenly start hurting or swelling.

The most common complaints following TKA include swelling, activity-related pain and mechanical symptoms, like a crunching behind the kneecap and even clicking when the patient walks. With THA, common painful symptoms include persistent pain around the tendon or bursa on the side of the hip.

WHAT DO YOU DO IF YOUR PATIENT EXPERIENCES PERSISTENT PAIN AFTER JOINT REPLACEMENT SURGERY?

Sorting out what is a normal discomfort for a prosthetic joint and what is a more serious problem is not always straightforward. What may seem like a minor ache or pain could be a sign of a more serious underlying problem. Problems such as instability or loosening of the knee or hip, or even more unusual problems like corrosion or metal sensitivity, can be easily misdiagnosed; ruling out infection and instability is critical.

The optimal plan of care for those patients who continue to experience ongoing joint pain after TKA or THA is an evaluation referral with an orthopedic specialist. Specialized tertiary referral centers like Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute offer expert specialist care and advanced technology, including leadingedge imaging, such as MRI scanning with metal artifacts suppression, to diagnose reasons for persistent symptoms after a knee or hip replacement.

Sometimes patients have unrealistic expectations of their replacement, because of what they’ve been told or seen on TV or social media. Expecting the joint to be normal versus artificial is a common source of dissatisfaction. They may not follow proper rehab or activity levels. These patients require a comprehensive evaluation of their overall fitness level, including other joints like the shoulders and ankles. Patients need to focus on total body fitness and understand what a replacement joint can and cannot do.

An overall aging population, a rise in the prevalence of risk factors such as obesity, and the popularity of maintaining active lifestyles not only contribute to the increasing number of joint replacement surgeries, but also the inevitable consequential increase in complications or failed joint replacements. We also have seen an increasing number of joint replacements in a younger patient population whose active lifestyles place added stress and wear on their original and replacement joints. With normal use and activity, every joint replacement implant begins to wear over time, and excessive activity or weight may increase the rate of this normal wear, causing the replacement joint to loosen and become painful.

Evaluation by an orthopedic specialist may determine that a painful knee or hip replacement does need any further surgical intervention. It may simply be something that indicates additional physical therapy, weight loss or activity modification. But there is an increasing number of patients who will require a joint replacement revision (redo).

WHEN IS REVISION SURGERY NECESSARY?

Revision, or redo, surgery is a complex procedure that involves removing and replacing the original joint implant, usually due to a complication from the initial replacement.

Overall, complication rates following TKA or THA surgery are low. Serious complications, such as a joint infection, occur in fewer than 1-2 percent of patients. Instability can occur in 2-3 percent of knee replacements, and 2-3 percent of hip replacements can have a dislocation or similar problem. These percentages are small, but given the large number of surgeries performed, it adds up to a significant number of people experiencing undue discomfort and pain.

Typically, more women than men undergo knee replacement, with hip replacements being about even between men and women. Overall, men place more wear on replacement joints than women, due both to more body weight and slightly more activity, resulting in a slightly higher need for revision surgery.

Data from Medicare shows that the average rate of revision surgery within 90 days is 0.2 percent but increases to 3.7 percent within 18 months. These are usually due to infection or mechanical complications of the implant. While surgical techniques and implant designs and materials continue to advance, implant surfaces can wear down and the components can loosen over time. Research suggests that long-term wear and loosening affects 6 percent of people after 5 years and 12-15 percent after 10 years.

Only a handful of centers in Florida specialize in diagnosing and treating conditions associated with problematic joint replacements. Specialists with the Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute perform hundreds of successful revisions of knee and hip replacements every year for patients throughout Florida and the Southeast.

These complex, long procedures can be challenging and require multidisciplinary and subspecialty care, including infectious disease experts and plastic surgeons, as well as advanced surgical, intensive care, recovery and rehabilitation facilities that provide a higher level of care. Backed by all the resources of the Orlando Health system, Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute offers this advanced level of care. And, expected to be completed in 2023, a new, state-of-the-art orthopedic complex on Orlando Health’s downtown Orlando campus will usher in the next generation of orthopedic care.

Ultimately, the basic message for your patients is “Don’t give up hope!” An orthopedic surgeon who specializes in complex knee and hip revision work can provide a comprehensive evaluation to determine how to best correct a persistent joint replacement problem.

Internationally recognized for joint replacement surgery and trauma, George J. Haidukewych, MD, serves as Orlando Health’s director of orthopedic trauma and chief of complex joint replacement, practicing at the Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute. Dr. Haidukewych specializes in total hip and total knee replacements as well as orthopedic trauma. He brings extensive experience in the management of failed and infected total hip and total knee replacements and in reconstruction of the joints after trauma. Up to half of his practice is dedicated to solving these challenging problems from around the Southeast. Dr. Haidukewych completed his residency training at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, as well as a fellowship at Florida Orthopaedic Institute in the Tampa Bay area.

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Other features of PD including depression, constipation. REM sleep disorders should also be managed concomitantly.

In long-standing or medically refractory cases of at least 4 years of PD, Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) or globus pallidus interna (GPI) is a great option to provide relief with disabling symptoms. In summary, early accurate diagnosis by a neurologist experienced in PD along with a multidisciplinary approach should be used for improving the symptoms and quality of life of PD patients.

Dr. Jaivir Rathore, A triple board-certified top-rated neurologist trained at the Johns Hopkins and the Cleveland Clinic, Harvard University journal published neuroscientist and the Medical Director of Falcon Advanced Neurology & Epilepsy Freedom Center (FANEFC) in Orlando FL with additional clinics serving the largest retirement community of the world in The Villages FL provides comprehensive neurology care including movement disorders such as Parkinson’s disease. FANEFC is “Care Connected” with the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville FL for surgical cases including DBS for PD.

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