Reviewed by Dr Emily Kong MBBS | Accredited Orthopaedic Registrar
- The management of patients with painful total knee replacement
- Although TKR is effective operation for OA, symptoms may persist post op
- Management should have a multidisciplinary approach:
- Diagnosis + Investigation
- Pain Management
- Support
- Treatment and identify intrinsic and extrinsic causes of painful TKR early
- Involve patient’s GP
- Unrelieved acute severe pain can exacerbate pts pre-op tendency for anxiety, depression, hostility and pre-occupation with health
- Early attempts to relieve pain may avoid development of chronic states
Management of Pain
- Pain post TKR may increase or fail to improve:
- Regular pre-op analgesia ceased
- Physio input decreased
- Encourage regular analgesia
- Consider oral or topical options:
- Sustained released orals
- Transdermal patches
Management of Neuropathic Pain
- Clinical Assessment:
- Dysaesthesia
- Allodynia
- Pain assoc. with non-noxious stimuli
- Hyperalgesia
- Spontaneous pain
- Treatment options
- Capsaicin cream
- 5% lignocaine plasters:
- Trial for 2 weeks
- Regular massage of scar
- Tricyclic antidepressants:
- Dual effect: relief from anxiety +/depression
- Anticonvulsants:
- Gabapentin, pregabalin
Management of Painful Neuroma
- Trail conservative therapy 1st
- Consider resection after 6 months
- Positive response to local anaesthetic blocks crucial in identifying benefits from surgery
- Selective denervation of nerve:
- Satisfaction rate up to 86%
- High incidence of post op hypersensitivity (40%):
- Usually self limiting within 6wks
Management of CRPS
- Prospective study prevalence:
- 21% one month
- 13% three months
- 12.7% three months
- Risk factors:
- Pre-operative pain
- Distress
- Symptoms include:
- Diffuse skin, joint and musc. pain
- Sensory disturbances
- Neuropathic pain
- Signs and symptoms spread beyond the knee
- Beware of pain at rest
- Difficulty moving a mechanically sound TKR
- Analgesics should be introduced early to allow pts to participate in rehab and desensitisation programs
- Sympathetic blocks are generally not helpful:
- Should be reserved for those with clinical symptoms of sympathetically-mediated pain
- Success to Treatment is early Diagnosis and Management
- Prognosis variable:
- 50% develop chronic symptoms
- When managed early, long term prognosis similar to uncomplicated TKR at 54mths
Infection
- Goals of Treatment :
- Eradication of infection
- Alleviation of pain
- Recovery of function
- Variables:
- Superficial or deep infection
- Duration since surgery
- Host factors
- Soft tissue around knee
- Organism
- Treatment options:
- ABx suppression
- Arthroscopic or open debridement
- One or Two-staged revision
- Arthrodesis
- Amputation
Instability
- Unstable TKR causes pain due to abnormal stressors on knee and soft tissues
- Ascertain nature of instability:
- Quads weakness
- Flexion contracture
- PF maltracking
- Pain
- Early instability:
- Uncorrected pre-op ligamentous imbalance
- Improper intra-op ligamentous imbalancing
- Flexion-extension mismatch
- Iatrogenic collateral ligament damage
- Pre-existing neuromuscular pathology
- Late instability:
- 2° to malalignment causing ligament stretching
- Polyethylene wear
- Loosening
- Collapse
- Management is difficult:
- Weight loss
- Correction of hip/foot/extra-articular deformities
- Ligament reconstruction + constrained prosthesis
- Revision to hinged prosthesis
- Arthrodesis
Extensor Mechanism Problems
- Common cause of pain and dissatisfaction post-op:
- PF maltracking + instability
- Extensor mechanism disruption
- Patellar clunk syndrome
- Peri-patellar adhesions
- Polyethylene wear
- Osteonecrosis
- PF instability:
- Incidence of sublux/disloc.
- previously 10-35%
- Newer prosthetic designs <1%
- Can be 2° to:
- Malrotation of implant
- Overstuffing PFJ
- Tissue imbalance
- Asymmetrical resection of patella
- Management
- Conservative Management not usually helpful:
- VMO strengthening
- Bracing
- Mainstay of Treatment is surgical
- Malrotation of components:
- Difficult to address without revision of one or both components
- If components correct, lateral retinacular release may improve PF tracking, but can cause complications:
- Wound healing
- AVN of patella or Fracture
- Post-op pain + swelling
- Slower rehab
- Incidence of sublux/disloc.
- Rupture of patellar tendon:
- Uncommon: incidence 0.12%
- Partial avulsion can be reattached primarily
- Reinforcement with autograft or synthetic graft
- Extensor lag +/restricted ROM may persist
- Quadriceps tendon rupture:
- Uncommon: incidence 1.1%
- Risk factors:
- Quads turn down
- Over-resection of patella +/patellar tendon damage
- Extensive lateral release
- Requires direct repair
- Periprosthetic Fracture of Patella
- Incidence 1-2%
- Predisposing factors:
- Lateral release
- Excessive resection of bone
- Single peg fInvestigationation
- Patella maltracking
- Malposition of implant
- Management depends on:
- Location
- Pattern of Fracture
- Extensor mechanism integrity
- Stability of implant
- Quality of bone
- Conservative Management:
- No extensor mechanism disruption
- No loosening of component
- No major malalignment
- Surgical Management:
- Disruption of extensor mechanism
- Dislocation of patella
- Unstable implants
- Ortiguera and Berry Classification + Treatment :
- Type I: Stable implant, intact ext mech.
- Conservative Treatment
- Type II: Intact implant + ruptured ext mech.
- Ext mech. repair + partial patellectomy or ORIF
- Type IIIa: Loose patella, good bone
- Revision component or resection arthroplasty
- Type IIIb: Loose patella, poor bone
- Removal of implant + patelloplasty/total patellectomy
- Type I: Stable implant, intact ext mech.
Stiffness
- Incidence not well described:
- 3% to 60%
- Common presenting complaint
- Can lead to pain and functional limitation
- Difficult to define:
- Need to clarify what pt is happy or unhappy about
- Contributing factors:
- Poor pre-op ROM
- Previous knee surgery
- Infection
- Technical errors: over stuffing, imbalancing, malrotation, elevation of joint line
- CRPS
- Severe post-op pain preventing rehab
- Treatment options:
- Intense physio
- MUA
- Arthroscopic or open arthrolysis
- Revision
- MUA:
- Risks: Fracture, rupture PT, wound breakdown, haemarthrosis
- Rehab post manipulation critical to success
- Analgesia
- Timing:
- 2 weeks Vs 6 weeks
- Delaying factors: haematoma, medical Cx
- Arthroscopic release:
- May be beneficial at 3-6mths post op in well-balanced knee
- Very stiff knee may break instruments
- May be able to assess contributing factors to stiffness
Impingement
- Popliteus Tendon:
- Difficult to diagnose
- Treatment arthroscopic release
- Fabellar:
- Consider in pts with discrete posterolateral pain and large fabella
- Pain often activity-related
- Impinges on femoral or tibial component
- Treatment excision
Patellar Clunk Syndrome
- Incidence up to 3.5%
- Three main groups:
- Isolated fibrous nodule located in suprapatellar region
- Impinging hypertrophic synovitis, generalised hypertrophic synovitis with no fibrous nodule
- Combination of the above
- Excellent results with arthroscopic resection
Recurrent Haemarthrosis
- In absence of bleeding disorder, is due to impingement of proliferative synovium
- Often treated conservatively
- Surgical Treatment successful:
- Arthroscopic or open synovectomy
- Surgical embolisation
Role of Arthroscopy in Painful TKR
- Good for Treatment of:
- Soft tissue impingement
- Arthrofibrosis
- Loose body
- Acute infection
- Recommend 24-48hrs prophylactic ABx
- Care not to scratch implants wear debris
Unexplained Pain
- Incidence at 1 year up to 18.2%
- Series of 622 pts:
- 4% unexplained pain
- 55.5% improvement without intervention
- Revision results in these pts unpredictable
Other potential causes of a painful TKR and how to avoid them
- Incision site:(1)
- Avoid skin incisions too far medially: causes large lateral skin flaps and potential increased rate of wound complication
- Placement of the skin incision slightly lateral to the midline can assist in eversion of the patellar, especially in obese pts
- Layered wound closure without tension to minimize risk of wound necrosis
- Tourniquet:(3)
- May not influence the satisfaction post operatively based on a pt questionnaire
- Pain scores not significantly different between tourniquet Vs no tourniquet
- Haemostasis before closure:(1)
- Meticulous wound haemostasis is required to avoid a post operative haematoma
- Pain may be increased from pressure caused by a large haematoma
- Cement Vs Uncemented:(2, 4)
- Start up pain occurs with initial wt bearing and improves after a few steps: following cemented arthroplasty – lasts 4-6wks, cementless – 3-4mths because micromotion is present until ingrowth occurs
- Localised tenderness/pain of tibial component may occur due to incomplete cementation
- Pain from loosening of a cemented femoral component may be due to inaccurate bony cuts, poor cement technique and deficient bone
- Avoid cementing onto sclerotic bone
- Defects in cement mantle can act as channels for passage of polyethylene debris into bone-cement mantle allows for osteolysis
- Pain associated with loosening of cementless TKRs may be due to incomplete porous coating, screw holes and incomplete bony ingrowth
- Patient-related risk factors:(1)
- Long term steroid use can delay/impair wound healing
- Obesity: difficulty with exposure, excessive retraction of wound, larger incision, thick layer of adipose tissue therefore skin less adherent to vascular supply increasing chances of necrosis
- Malnutrition
- Smoking
- Diabetes
- Peripheral vascular disease can cause delayed wound healing: hypovolaemia intra-op can reduce oxygen delivery to operative site
Take home message
- Difficult problem – multifactorial
- Needs multidisciplinary approach
- Identify and treat cause promptly – delay may lead to chronicity
- If no cause can be found despite extensive Investigation, revision surgery should be performed with caution:
- Low success rate
- More than 50% may improve with conservative Treatment alone
References
- D. Ayers, D. Dennis, N. Johanson, V. Pellegrini, Jr Instructional Course Lectures, The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons – Common Complications of Total Knee Arthroplasty J Bone Joint Surg Am 1997;79:278-311
- M. Gonzalez, A. Mekhail The Failed Total Knee Arthroplasty: Evaluation and Etiology J Am Acad Orthop Surg 2004;12:436-446
- P.Baker, J. van der Meulen, J. Lewsey, P. Gregg The role of pain and function in determining patient satisfaction after total knee replacement J Bone Joint Surg Br 2007;89-B:893-900
- V. Mandalia, K. Eyres, P. Schranz, A. Toms Evaluation of patients with a painful total knee replacement J Bone Joint Surg Br 2008;90-B:265-71