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Failed Total Knee Replacement

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I am planning to treat a patient who has had total knee replacement in

both knees. He never regained normal ROM, and has been very stiff. I

don't have alot of info on this patient yet, but I was wondering if

anybody had some general info. on treating this problem. What would

cause a failure of this normally succesful surgery? General prognosis

of with acupuncture treatment. References?

 

Any input is appreciated.

 

Jason

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Hi Jason,

 

> I am planning to treat a patient who has had total knee replacement in

> both knees. He never regained normal ROM, and has been very stiff. I

> don't have alot of info on this patient yet, but I was wondering if

> anybody had some general info. on treating this problem. What would

> cause a failure of this normally succesful surgery?

 

Muscular atrophy of disuse is common after prolonged pain & /or joint

replacement.

 

Assuming that the artificial joint has not mechanical/engineering faults that

limit ROM, IMO the most likely cause of poor knee ROM is weakness /

atrophy of the muscles between the hip area and knee/patella/tibia, esp the

anterior thigh (extensor) ms.

 

> General prognosis with acupuncture treatment.

 

IMO, if m atrophy / weakness is involved, one could expect some

improvement of knee ROM to AP alone at weekly intervals for 6-10 weeks

but improvement would be slow.

 

IMO, supplementing AP Tx with daily use of TENS on 4 linear circuits (ant

thigh, lat thigh, post thigh and med thigh), + TP therapy, + daily thigh & knne

area massage (preferably with Tiger Balm or Moov rubs) + knee ROM

exercises should maximise the chances of improvement.

 

> References?

 

Had not time to look.

 

Best regards,

 

 

PS: If the surgeon damaged the motor or sensory nerves to the knee area,

the prognosis would drop, but even peripheral nerve paralysis can respond

to Tx similar to that mentioned above.

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Hi Jason,

 

I've treated a few patients who had ongoing stiffness

and pain following partial and whole knee replacement

surgeries. Some of them I treated several years after

their operations, and some fairly soon after.

 

I found that my patients who were rigorous about doing

their physical therapy exercises regained their full

ROM, while those who slacked off did not. Exercising

helps keep things from freezing up and adhering. I

think it's fair to extrapolate that patients who were

fairly active before the surgery would heal better

than those who were not.

 

I got great results with local needling of as many

acupuncture points around the knees (including the

ones behind the knee) as seemed relevant. Stiffness

was remarkably better right after the first treatment,

and pain was also reduced. I did not need to see

these patients, all of whom were elderly, for many

visits either. To my surprise, this was fairly easy

to treat with great results and tons of patient

satisfaction.

 

 

 

--- jayburkelac <jayburkelac wrote:

 

> I am planning to treat a patient who has had total

> knee replacement in

> both knees. He never regained normal ROM, and has

> been very stiff. I

> don't have alot of info on this patient yet, but I

> was wondering if

> anybody had some general info. on treating this

> problem. What would

> cause a failure of this normally succesful surgery?

> General prognosis

> of with acupuncture treatment. References?

>

> Any input is appreciated.

>

> Jason

>

>

>

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi All, & Andrea Beth,

 

wrote:

> I got great results with local needling of as many acupuncture points

> around the knees (including the ones behind the knee) as seemed

> relevant. Stiffness was remarkably better right after the first

> treatment, and pain was also reduced. I did not need to see these

> patients, all of whom were elderly, for many visits either. To my

> surprise, this was fairly easy to treat with great results and tons of

> patient satisfaction.

 

I see problems after joint replacement more often in elderly post-

menopausal people. My approach to AP in these cases includes Tx of the

whole person. One must consider (and Tx if needed) KI deficiency in those

cases. As well as local points, I include points for weaknesses in other

organs / systems. Points like BL11, KI07, BL23, SP06 and LV03. I add

points (and other advice) for other presenting signs, such as poor sleep,

worry, etc.

 

Optimum ROM depends on optimum function of the muscles and support-

structures that control the affected joint(s). I agree that regular exercise is

very important for people after hip / knee replacement, and that

acupuncture can help, especially for pain and ROM.

 

IMO, regardless of effective pain control, people or animals with muscular

atrophy cannot regain optimal joint Fx and limb strength until the muscle-

mass and strength becomes more normal. This is why I advise use of

TENS, exercise, massage, etc, as suggested in my earlier mail.

 

Best regards,

 

 

 

 

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