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New Knee Surgery Offers Speedy Recovery
WASHINGTON - Just nine hours after Grover Thomas had his knee replaced,
he hobbled home from the hospital. Five days later, he was walking
unassisted, no crutch or cane in sight.
Thousands have total knee replacements
every year, and many might be green with envy upon reading this: The
operation usually requires several days in the hospital and weeks on
crutches, not counting arduous physical therapy.
Now, a small but growing number of
surgeons are implanting the manmade joint with less of that —
through a mere 3-inch incision and without cutting a muscle and
tendon that are crucial for knee flexing. The changes promise less
pain and faster recovery.
At least one, Dr. Richard Berger, even
offers it as outpatient surgery, so far sending Thomas and 22 other
patients home within hours of the operation.
It's "a little like building a ship in a
bottle," says Berger, of Chicago's Rush University Medical Center.
"It takes a little bit of practice and a little bit of skill."
Patients recover three times faster than
with standard surgery, says Dr. Alfred Tria of New Jersey's Robert
Wood Johnson Medical School, who pioneered the new method and has
used it on 140 patients.
It's not suitable for everyone, Tria
cautions: People who are obese, over age 80, have had other
nonarthroscopic knee surgery or are very knock-kneed or bowlegged
don't qualify.
But Tria predicts that within five
years, the minimally invasive method will account for about 40
percent of total knee replacements.
"Other patients that are in (physical)
therapy at the same time I am are eight weeks out and still on
crutches," says Thomas, 59, an insurance company chief executive in
Lake Forest, Ill., who wore out his natural knee running marathons.
In contrast, Thomas went on a half-hour
outdoor bike ride just three weeks after his Feb. 3 surgery.
He's not completely recovered — the knee
still is tender, and he's still in physical therapy. But "no one
that sees me can believe it" is a brand-new knee, Thomas says.
People undergo total knee replacement
when arthritis or injury erodes the joint's natural cushioning to
the point where it's hard to walk even short distances without
severe pain. A recent analysis commissioned by the National
Institutes of Health said the treatment gives tremendous relief and
a much-improved quality of life.
Still, the operation and recovery can be
grueling.
Traditionally, surgeons make a 12-inch
incision in the front of the knee, peel back the kneecap, and cut
through the quadriceps muscle and a tendon that attaches it. That
allows open access to the thigh and shin bones, which are cut to fit
the metal-and-plastic joint implant.
It is healing of the muscle and tendon
that causes much of the pain during recovery, as patients must
stretch those injured parts to regain knee motion.
With the new procedure, doctors make a
3-inch incision slightly to the kneecap's side, and harmlessly slide
under the muscle and tendon to get to the bones that need cutting.
Then the same artificial joint is squeezed into place.
Key was creating specialized surgical
instruments that could allow bone-cutting in such tiny quarters.
Tria and Dr. Thomas Coon of Redding, Calif., developed the method
and asked joint manufacturer Zimmer Inc. to make the instruments.
"We get essentially the same bone cuts
as you used to get with the knee wide open," says Tria. "The
principles of the operation have to remain exactly the same."
The cost of knee replacement varies
around the country, from $22,000 to $39,000, usually covered by
insurance. The new method's shorter hospital stays could cut the
bill by 30 percent, Tria says.
He hospitalizes patients for two days
instead of the standard operation's four, saying the stay "probably
is a little bit of emotionalism on our part and a little bit of
safety the patients like." Other surgeons keep patients only
overnight. Chicago's Berger, best known for developing minimally
invasive hip replacement, is believed the first to offer the
outpatient option.
Surgeons have been inching toward less
invasive knee replacement, and this method "is reasonable," but
there aren't yet studies proving that knees implanted this way are
as durable, cautions Dr. Clifford Colwell, president of the American
Association for Hip and Knee Surgeons. Interested patients should
question surgeons carefully about their experience.
The less-invasive operation is more
difficult for surgeons, who train on cadavers, and takes about 30
minutes longer to complete, says Tria, who will teach the technique
at this week's meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic
Surgeons.
Reference
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