An evidence-based review of enhanced recovery interventions in knee replacement surgery
- PMID: 24025284
- PMCID: PMC4188283
- DOI: 10.1308/003588413X13629960046435
An evidence-based review of enhanced recovery interventions in knee replacement surgery
Abstract
Introduction: Total knee replacement (TKR) is a very common surgical procedure. Improved pain management techniques, surgical practices and the introduction of novel interventions have enhanced the patient's postoperative experience after TKR. Safe, efficient pathways are needed to address the increasing need for knee arthroplasty in the UK. Enhanced recovery programmes can help to reduce hospital stays following knee replacements while maintaining patient safety and satisfaction. This review outlines common evidence-based pre, intra and postoperative interventions in use in enhanced recovery protocols following TKR.
Methods: A thorough literature search of the electronic healthcare databases (MEDLINE(®), Embase™ and the Cochrane Library) was conducted to identify articles and studies concerned with enhanced recovery and fast track pathways for TKR.
Results: A literature review revealed several non-operative and operative interventions that are effective in enhanced recovery following TKR including preoperative patient education, pre-emptive and local infiltration analgesia, preoperative nutrition, neuromuscular electrical stimulation, pulsed electromagnetic fields, perioperative rehabilitation, modern wound dressings, different standard surgical techniques, minimally invasive surgery and computer assisted surgery.
Conclusions: Enhanced recovery programmes require a multidisciplinary team of dedicated professionals, principally involving preoperative education, multimodal pain control and accelerated rehabilitation; this will be boosted if combined with minimally invasive surgery. The current economic climate and restricted healthcare budget further necessitate brief hospitalisation while minimising costs. These non-operative interventions are the way forward to achieve such requirements.
References
-
- National Joint Registry for England and Wales. 9th Annual Report. Hemel Hempstead: NJR; 2012.
-
- McDonald DA, Siegmeth R, Deakin AHet al An enhanced recovery programme for primary total knee arthroplasty in the United Kingdom – follow up at one year. Knee 2012; 19: 525–529. - PubMed
-
- Raphael M, Jaeger M, van Vlymen J. Easily adoptable total joint arthroplasty program allows discharge home in two days. Can J Anaesth 2011; 58: 902–910. - PubMed
-
- Berend KR, Lombardi AV, Mallory TH. Rapid recovery protocol for peri-operative care of total hip and total knee arthroplasty patients. Surg Technol Int 2004; 13: 239–247. - PubMed
-
- Yoon RS, Nellans KW, Geller JAet al Patient education before hip or knee arthroplasty lowers length of stay. J Arthroplasty 2010; 25: 547–551. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical