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I read on several sources that around 750,00 TKR’s are done yearly in the U.S.
Success was mentioned as 85-90%. So even at a generous 90%, that means about 10% (75,000) are not successful. But I haven’t read criteria used to
determine that. I am at ten months with daytime comfort, but night pain
preventing much sleep. I hope this is not predictive. And I do daily exercises.

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Replies to "I read on several sources that around 750,00 TKR’s are done yearly in the U.S. Success..."

@lynnn

The definition of unsuccessful mostly includes people who are not satisfied with the feeling of the implant or the mechanics of it compared to their expectations.

I was severely misaligned and bone on bone. My surgeon did discuss with me doing a partial but he determined that my arthritis was too bad on all surfaces. So he did a total which even included doing a patelloplasty. I wanted a bicruciate retaining implant if my ACL was strong enough and my surgeon who is vastly experienced doing that agreed. it turned out that despite my "severe fixed contracture and valgus" he was able to both do a BCR (Journey II XR) and fix my alignment with a functional alignment.

I came out of it with only pain when I first stood up and started walking (with a walker as my surgeon insisted that I use one my first week) and some soreness around the muscles above the knee. After about 20 feet the pain from my incision area mostly abated.

So...it is possible to have a TKR, even a complex one, without substantial pain. Most of it depends upon finding and using an incredibly skilled surgeon (great mind, great hands) but some of it does depend upon pure luck. Feces does sometimes just happen.

I have stenosis in my spine. For years it was non symptomatic. Then at the beginning of 2025 it became symptomatic with pain radiating down my legs. My pain doctor gave me a steroid shot (caudal, epidural) and my pain is in abeyance (right now). On the other hand, I had severe paid on my right leg (my surgical leg) when I stepped the wrong way on my heel. A nerve impingement from the knee I determined (with the help of my pain doctor, my knee surgeon, and my foot/ankle surgeon). My surgeon gave me a steroid shot in the knee and it did nothing. But after my knee surgeon replaced my knee and did the functional alignment, the pain disappeared (12 days ago).

My only thought would be to see a good neurosurgeon. When my Neurologist first sent me to a neurosurgeon for an opinion, the neurosurgeon put me on what he termed a watchful waiting list of about a hundred patients. He is/was top rated and very busy doing minimally invasive surgeries (he wrote the primer on it) so he has no need to rush people into surgery. Look for a neurosurgeon like that and see if you can get an appointment. No one understands nerves like a good neurosurgeon.

@lynnn
My knee surgery gave me so many problems. After about three years and two surgery I am in more pain than before surgery. Went to HSSS TOP hospital of the country. But had a negligent greedy Dr who did not take medicare. Paid cash. Once your surgeries are messed up. Other surgeons do not want to touch you. Lost faith in American medical system.