| Literature DB >> 33778111 |
Alireza Mousavian1, Soheil Sabzevari1, Shirin Ghiasi1, Omid Shahpari1, Amin Razi1, Adel Ebrahimpour2, Mohammad H Ebrahimzadeh1.
Abstract
Total knee replacement (TKR) is a growing attractive treatment for a degenerative knee disease. However, there remain some certain devastating complications to be discussed with patients preoperatively, including limb amputation. This systematic review aimed to determine the rate of amputation following TKR. In this study, the literature was searched up to 2019. The papers were included in which knee amputation was reported following TKR. The primary search concluded the articles from EMBASE, SCOPUS, PubMed, Web of Science, MEDLINE, OvidSP, CINAHL, EBSCO, Web of Science™, and CENTRAL. After screening and excluding case reports, 40 papers were included in the present study. The present review showed that amputation is a real end result of knee replacements either in primary or revision knee arthroplasties, which needs to be discussed with patients for their decision-making. Prevalence of amputation in terms of failure or complications after TKR procedures was estimated between 0.1-10% in different studies , with 5.1% amputation rate in infected TKR and 0.025% amputation rate in primary TKR as a result of infection in our review. Deep infection was the main cause of amputation. Vascular complications and fractures associated with bone loss and compartment syndrome were other reasons for amputation.Entities:
Keywords: Amputation; Arthroplasty; Compartment syndrome; Infection; Total knee replacement
Year: 2021 PMID: 33778111 PMCID: PMC7957107 DOI: 10.22038/abjs.2020.53892.2692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Bone Jt Surg ISSN: 2345-461X