Stairs after TKR (1 side, 72 yrs old)
Hi. I am bone on bone, one spur, arthritis in one knee for yrs. Stairs are hard for me. Going up is easier than going down and can only do good leg down/bad leg up.
We are staying at a house that is raised up with parking, etc. underneath. (Post hurricane sandy construction).
13-14 exterior steps to entrance of house.
The place (a rental) has a full bath on the main floor with all bedrooms up a flight. We’re bringing a bed down to main floor for post-surgery.
Questions:
1. How painful/hard to climb the outside stairs when I leave the hospital?
2. Would it be better to extend hospital stay to 2-3 days?
3. How long before I should be able to navigate the outside stairs for rehab/walks/outings as a passenger?
4. How long before I can sleep upstairs in a bedroom (there’s a second bathroom upstairs)
Am anxious about pain/strength/getting around.
Thanks
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Joint Replacements Support Group.
Thanks
Thanks for sharing all this! It’s a big help.
I am now about a year out from a right TKR. Both my surgeon and PT guy told me that steps would be the most difficult to do and the last thing to return to normal. It takes both patience and persistence to get there. After my surgery, I had at-home PT 3X a week for two weeks, then went to outpt PT. The second week of home PT, the therapist had me try some steps, one at a time, and said I should do that once daily. I'd say it was about 6-8 weeks until I felt comfortable going up and down the stairs the "normal" way, and by the six month mark, I was pretty much okay with it. Improvement still continued after that. Now, I don't even think about it most times, except for a little stiffness if I've been using the knee a lot that day. Hang in there!
Thanks. Very helpful. Appreciate it!
You are very welcome, and hope all goes well for you!
Thanks!
Hey Persia as far as the correct leg order for stairs when you have bad knees, it should be bad knee down, good knee up. If you step up with your bad knee, you're putting pressure on that joint. Going down with the good knee is the same thing, the bad knee takes the stress of your body weight as you step down.
It's easy to mix these up so I hope you just mixed up the words. Again, bad knee down, good knee up.
And yes, going downstairs is more painful than going up.
As for your situation....... Stairs were one of the last things I could do without pain, discomfort. I know that doesn't help much. You could use a cane, or if possible a walker to navigate stairs - but that's very tricky and risky.
Can you stay with someone for two or three months while you're rehabbing - where stairs aren't an issue?
All the best. BTW I'm a 69 y/o male, had both knees replaced in 2022. Best thing I ever did for my health, and it took a lot of work on my part with a lot of help and support from my wife. The surgery itself is the easiest part!
Hi. No, I didn’t mix them up, just found it more comfortable to do this way.
Can’t live elsewhere. Currently (post covid) are living in Canada at our cottage. (Still legally a nj resident.)
We rented a place in nj for 3mos (presurgery to rehab). It has the flight to get into the house.
So, arrival after surgery is my biggest concern. And 2 weeks after as I want to get out for rehab, etc.
Thanks
Thanks. My surgery isn’t until late Jan.
Appreciate the advice.
The way I was told to remember the correct stair order is the "bad" lef, foot, ankle, or knee stays down in hell while the good leg goes up to heaven.
I stayed overnight at the hospital after my TKR and the next day the PT had me going up and down stairs one step at a time. It was not a problem after that though I did camp out on the living room sofa for 2 or 3 weeks just in case some emergency arose and I had to get out of the house quickly.
Good luck.