Total knee arthroplasty stiffness
Synopsis
Prevalence: This may occur in 8%-12% of TKA patients.
Risk factors: The risk of stiffness after TKA is likely multifactorial. Preoperative range of motion is the most important factor influencing postoperative ROM. Other patient risk factors include medical comorbidities, low pain tolerance, patella baja, and history of prior knee surgery.
Technical factors during surgery can also influence ROM postoperatively: Malrotation of the components, insertion of larger components than necessary resulting in tight flexion gap, inadequate osteophyte resection, raising the joint line > 10 mm, inadequate posterior tibial slope, and over-tightening of the extensor mechanism during closure.
Postoperative complications such as prosthetic joint infection, arthrofibrosis with intraarticular scar tissue formation, heterotopic ossification, complex regional pain syndrome, and delayed rehabilitation can lead to inadequate range of motion and stiffness.
Pathophysiology: ROM after TKA relies on the interplay between the implanted components and the soft tissue envelope that crosses the joint space or interacts with the components intraarticularly. Any alteration of this balance can limit ROM.
Codes
Z96.659 – Presence of unspecified artificial knee joint
SNOMEDCT:
69260008 – Complication of internal prosthetic device
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Last Updated:02/13/2024