Having knee replacement: how to prepare and questions about PT
I'm having knee replacement (L) on June 20th.
Any suggestions on how to get ready for it?
How soon does physical therapy start after one gets home?
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I walk every day and have done stretches and aerobics since the 1960s.<br />
Exercise is very important as well as keeping your weight down. <br />
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The things we take for granted, others are praying for!<br />
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One more thing try to lose weight,even 5 lbs. will help.Less stress on your<br />
joints.Try if possible stationary biking (YMCA) rather than walking,less<br />
stress on knees and should be less pain.<br />
Great thought. I take probiotics everyday but will increase prior to surgery. Fantastic idea!!
I had a total knee replacement 7 months ago at UIHC, IowaCity,IA. I am a retired RN. I did strengthening for several weeks before the surgery. Check YouTube for exercises. I went to PT for several weeks afterwards.The guidance and encouragement a therapist gives I found to be helpful. I did not have much pain afterwards. Pain pills for good rest at night.You can not overdose on ice packs (for several weeks but maybe not everyday)! My surgeon would have been satisfied if I only walked a lot.They tell you to give yourself a year for complete rehab. I see changes every week so that now I have a lot of days I forget I had a knee replaced! My body did react to the new knee with several weeks of no appetite and I have since heard others tell this happened to them also. No worry it came back and the few pounds I lost was just as well!! During that time I did make sure I drank a supplement for the protein for healing. Good luck on your upcoming surgery. You'll be glad you had it done!
Ronnie3716...I had my left knee replaced 1-21-16. The first 6 weeks will be the toughest. I'm not one who takes lots of pain meds and having to take 4-6 pills at a time , by the evening I was a basket case. You will have lots of swelling and stiffness in the knee. What I found to help me out was my workout routine before the surgery . I continued to do squats, leg extensions, curls and leg press, however by the time the bandage came off, my leg was a flimsy mess, no muscle tone whatsoever but it helped. You will be up and walking the next day after surgery, full weight bearing, yep that's right, they will have you walking stairs the second day. Three days out of the hospital I had home health specialist and therapist at my door. Therapy 3'x a week and it was a killer. Take your pain meds at least 1 hour before start of therapy so you don't have unbearable pain. I still have pain and swelling in my knee now, and as of April 3rd I was out working my part time job at the World Champion Kansas City Royals Baseball stadium on my feet 5-7 hours a day. My tolerance for pain is pretty high, so the stiffness that I am experiencing is far less than what my knee was like this time last year. I am totally satisfied with my progress to this point but it will be at least a full year before I'm at 100%. Just have to take it day by day and today as I wright this post I am experiencing some pain and discomfort. You're going to have some good days and bad days and at times you will probably feel you have digressed, but you have to stay positive and keep the faith that this to " will come to past". Take care
@ronnie3716 you must be feeling much more prepared for surgery with all the great advice on this thread. Here are a few videos from Mayo Clinic specialists.
In this video (https://youtu.be/JAQW073ZUx8), Dr. Mary O'Connor reviews the recovery and follow-up after knee replacement. She echoes @niazumbanut, @FLOYDR and @kareniowa advice about exercise before surgery. She also discusses pain management and more.
Dr. Ortiguera answers FAQs in this video (https://youtu.be/kKLNfnKgjNI).
And here (https://youtu.be/Hy1qjQomD8Y) physical therapist, Jimmie talks about and demonstrates some exercises. Like Jimmie says, "Motion is lotion" for your knee.
No I had Dr. T
Morning all. I had my surgery thru CenterPoint Hospital, Dr. Gregory Ballard and will be doing my 4 month follow up on 5-9-16. I feel real good about my progress to this point. There have been some days though that I feel that I have regressed due to the tightness in the knee and also my knee can tell now when it's going to rain now. The pain at this point is minimal though I do feel where the cut was made to fit the knee into to bone. It comes and goes and will make you sit up in the bed if you're are laying down , but the good thing it only last a few seconds. It almost feels like someone hitting a punching bag for a few shots and that's it. Prior to this surgery I was in pain with every step that I took. My first knee surgery was Dec.1972 torn cartalidge , and over the years it had just got worse. I am very athletic, loved to run, cycle, play softball, but for the last five years I have not been able to run and now the doctor and P/T's have told me not to run because of the pounding the knee will take. I will be 62 yrs old 6-9-55 and plan on playing softball next year and getting my legs in the shape they were 20yrs ago. The one thing I know is that it will be a long hard road to recovery with some setbacks ,but my mind is geared for that to keep pushing and stay positive. And as always this to shall come to past..
I had my surgery in August of 2012 and had much pain after surgery . But after 2 months it was ok . Haven't had any pain since and feel perfectly well. I had my surgery at the Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota. And aIr can walk but not run,jump,kneel, skip, and bend my legs. Hope that my experience helps you<br />
Glad you are doing well. I can't run or skip but have no problem kneeling<br />
or bending my knees. When you say you can't bend what exactly does that<br />
mean?<br />