View clinical trials related to Total Knee Arthroplasty.
Filter by:Hospital stays after total joint replacement surgery have been getting shorter over the past 10 years. This is mostly due to new ways to manage pain and early rehabilitation. To be able to go home safely soon after surgery, patients need to: - 1) have adequate pain control - 2) be able to move through activities of daily living on their own (using aids) Femoral nerve block, in combination with pain medications, is one of the new treatment strategies that are currently being used at other hospitals in Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom. Nerve blocks involve a needle filled with local anesthetic into the nerve that allows the feeling of pain around the knee. With good pain management, patients will be able to more quickly bend their knee and regain the ability to walk with aids and move from sitting and lying positions to standing and walking. Once they can do these activities with adequate pain control, they can be discharged from hospital to continue recovery at home. The purpose of this study is to examine a new way of managing postoperative pain and encourage early knee flexion and mobility, while maintaining pain control for patients after total knee replacement. We believe that patients who receive the nerve block in addition to the regular pain medication will have more knee flexion at discharge and experience less pain than patients who only receive usual pain medications.
SUMMARY A prospective, randomized, single-blinded clinical trial is proposed to compare three tibial tray designs for patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty. This study is designed to address the clinically important issues of tibial component modularity and fixation in total knee replacement. The Zimmer NexGen Legacy knee system is an FDA approved device and in this study will be used with 1) a modular tibial tray inserted with cement and 2) a non-modular tibial tray inserted with cement, and 3) a non-modular tibial tray inserted without cement. The insertion of total knee components without cement has been done clinically for over 20 years but has not been specifically approved by the FDA. Thus treatment arm 3, a non-modular tray inserted without cement, would involve the so-called off-label use of the device. 136 cases will be assigned to each arm of the study. Each patient will be assessed two months after surgery, one year after surgery, two years after surgery, five years after surgery, and every three to five years thereafter. The principal outcome measures will be the Knee Society Clinical rating scale, the SF-36 and the presence of significant lucent lines.. These measures will be compared among patients in the 3 trial arms at 5 years post surgery (or at the last follow-up point for those who drop out or become lost to follow-up). The Knee Society scores and SF-36 scores will be analyzed using analysis of variance models Rates of significant lucencies, perioperative mortality, as well as complications such as deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolus, neurovascular complication, and infection will be compared among the groups using chi-square tests . Rates of revision surgery will be compared among the groups using survivorship methods. PURPOSE The primary aim of the study is to compare the results obtained with each of three tibial designs for patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty. Those results will be measured with disease-specific (Knee Society Scores), global (SF-36), and outcome measures. Radiographic results consisting of standing alignment, lateral and skyline views of the surgical knee will be recorded and analyzed. Completion of the intial investigation will occur at the 5-year interval after the last enrolled patient.
This study plans to investigate whether a reduced dose of bupivacaine (a local anesthetic numbing drug) injected into the spinal space for a total knee replacement will result in a shorter time to discharge from the recovery room while maintaining adequate surgical anesthesia.
purpose: to determine wether a compression bandage prolongs analgesia of local infiltration analgesia after total knee arthroplasty
To determine if following total knee replacement, putting local anesthetic—or numbing medication—for five days through a tiny tube next to the nerves that go to the knee will decrease the time that patients need to spend in the hospital.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether intraoperative computer-assisted navigation improves prosthetic implant positioning as compared to conventional intraoperatve instrumentation in Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA).