Knee #2- am I ready?
I just hit my 4-week mark post first TKR. My "good" knee took the brunt of compensating for the operative knee and is now really sore (even with the narcotic pain meds). I am seeing my surgeon next week to schedule knee #2. Any advice about how many weeks post-surgery is ideal before getting the other done? I met people in the hospital who were having their second knee done 5 weeks after their first. I was thinking 8-10 weeks would help me to be solid. Any thoughts or recommendations? I know we're all different but am interested to hear how YOU did it! Thank you.
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Wow- that's an encouraging story-- your sudden recovery, that it. I'd love one of those for knee #2. I am in in Western Massachusetts- equally close to Hartford, CT, Albany, NY and Boston.
Please tell me you're not doing knee slides 2 years PO! 🙂
@amytro @contentandwell Just my two cents but this is the best reply I've heard. Every TKR is different even when done on the same person, by the same surgeon, and at the same hospital. Another thing to consider is that you want enough time to go by to ensure that you did, indeed, pick the right surgeon. You don't want to find out that he used the wrong size implant on both knees! I had a friend who didn't find out until around 5 months PO since she and her PT team thought her progression ( or in her case, lack of) was mostly due to swelling and such. She was glad she waited and had the revision and other knee done by a better surgeon. But if you can by on a Cortisone shot or some other way to help you relieve pain, I would TRY to heal well on the first knee, condition the other, and go from there. Everyone says that the stronger you are the better the recovery but for me, that wasn't true really. Before my RTKR, I did an hour on the Elliptical 5 days a week, upper body weights 4x per week, and did a lot of walking. I was strong and healthy but this Thursday will be 7 weeks PO and my ROM is only 0/106 no assist and bend is around 113 with assistance from myself. (pulling while doing my knee slides) I was hoping to at least be 115 by now but no banana. So, my other knee will have to wait until next year. The verdict is still out on the surgeon as far as I"m concerned. So along with you insurance (make sure you have enough PT days left) there are a few things to consider before getting your other knee done.
Hi - yes, my chiro was recommended by a friend who had 2 knees before 50. She told me how good he was mixing PT and Chiro techniques. I follow recommendations from people who know where I am because they were there, you know? So he has helped a lot with the sciatica...I'm just going one time a week now. Acupuncture is something I have used for various pain things over the years, but the IT band exercises are starting to make a difference now .. 8.5 weeks out. Good luck!
@dkapustin definitely the right surgeon is very important. I was very careful about choosing my surgeon, and also the knee. I have not regretted that at all. He has been great, and was extremely responsive when I was in pain for longer than seemed to be typical. He was as happy as I was when the pain lifted so suddenly.
JK
@amytro I know every person and every surgery is different, but I thought I would share my experience with you. In my opinion I would wait several months if you are able. I had my TKR in May 2017 and like you my old knee took a beating because it was the stabilizing leg. I too was going to have the other knee replaced as soon as I recovered. However, in August, I fell and landed on my new knee and my shoulder. My new knee was fine, but in September, I realized that something was wrong with my shoulder. I went to see a shoulder specialist and found out that I had torn 3 tendons and my bicep muscle. I was scheduled for surgery in October and was released from the knee surgeon even though I was still in PT. I had surgery on my shoulder and they had to repair a good bit of damage due to the fall and arthritis. The span between the 2 surgeries was 5 months. I had a much harder time recovering from my shoulder surgery. Major surgery is a trauma to the body and in my case, I feel needed more recovery time. I was exhausted all the time and after some testing, I recently found out that I was anemic and my B12 levels were very low. I have to wonder if having the 2 surgeries so close together was a factor. I just started taking B12 injections and a high dose of iron. I will be retested in 6 months. I will be cleared from my shoulder surgeon soon and now have gone back to the knee surgeon. I am going to try and schedule my knee surgery in August. This will give me 10 months to recovery from my shoulder surgery and will give my body a chance to raise the iron and B12 levels. I wish I could have waited a few months in between the knee and shoulder surgery, but I had to have the shoulder surgery or I would have risked losing range of motion in my arm. Discuss it with your doctor. Everyone is different. My body just needed a little more time to heal. Good luck to you. Let us know what you decide. I am also interested to see how your second operation goes, since I am about to schedule mine next week.
I just want to say that I am 7 weeks PO from a RTKR and there is no way in Hades I would even consider getting the other done until next year if it's possible. I am struggling with this one and will get cortisone shots, etc on my other one until this knee surgery is a distant memory. As you might have guessed, I'm not one of those who breezed through it and was shoveling snow 5 weeks PO.
Thanks for your reply! I wish cortisone still worked for me but after 5 years of shots, it doesn't. I do think I will chicken out if I don't get it done soon. I'm not shoveling snow but I am recovering well with flexion at 120 after 5 weeks and I'm driving to essential places like PT, the doctor and the pharmacy. I meet with the surgeon to discuss in a week so I'll surely take his opinion into consideration as well! Thank you.
@amytro. When cortisone stopped working for me, I got synvisc shots, and they did help a lot. I could have had the knee done six months after my liver transplant but I simply couldn’t face another surgery and recovery so I waited until a year after my transplant. At that point I was definitely more up to doing the exercises to ensure that the TKR was a success.
If you decide to try synvisc, you can have one shot, or a series of three, one a week. I chose the latter.
JK
@contentandwell I see that you were able to get the synvisc shots. I tried to do that for both knees ( not at the same time) and my insurance refused to pay for them. I found that to be very frustrating. I will be scheduling my left knee this week.