Adequate postoperative pain control in patients who have undergone total joint arthroplasty allows faster rehabilitation and reduces the rate of postoperative complications. Multimodal pain management involves the introduction of adjunctive pain control methods in an attempt to control pain with less reliance on opioids and fewer side effects. Current research suggests that traditional nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and the associated cyclooxygenase type-2 (COX-2) inhibitors improve pain control in most cases. Nearly all multimodal pain management modalities have a safe side-effect profile when they are added to existing methods. The exception is the administration of DepoDur (extended-release epidural morphine) to elderly or respiratory-compromised patients because of a potential for hypoxia and cardiopulmonary events.
Purpose. To review 6 cases of periprosthetic distal femoral fracture during total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Methods. Of 778 women and 691 men who underwent primary TKAs using posterior-stabilised (n=1240), cruciate-retaining (n=165), or semiconstrained (n=64) implant, 5 women and one man with a mean age of 73.3 years and a mean body mass index of 31.6 kg/m 2 sustained an intra-operative periprosthetic distal femoral fracture and were followed up for a mean of 12.8 (range, 2-39) months. Results. Respectively in patients with a posteriorstabilised, cruciate-retaining, or semi-constrained implant, the intra-operative fracture rates were 0.32%, 0%, and 3.13%. For women, the respective rates were 0.46%, 0%, and 5.10%. Intra-operative fracture was 9.69 times (p=0.03) more likely to occur in patients with a semi-constrained implant than those with a posterior-stabilised implant, and was 4.44 times (p=0.22) more likely to occur in women than in men. Half of the fractures occurred during the trial phase Distal femoral fracture during primary total knee arthroplasty
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