Truth about Total Knee Replacements
Your new knee will never feel as good as your original old one
For most people it takes a full year to get most of the benefits of the surgery
Many people experience a clicking sound when walking for years or forever after the surgery
You should do physical therapy for a year after the surgery to get the best range of motion results even though your therapist will discharge you after several months.
There are no studies which will tell you what activities you can do after TKR. Is doubles tennis OK? Golf? What you read online varies. There are no clear answers.
Many surgeons are finished with you after the surgery. If you have issues with the surgery's aftermath, they may not be that helpful.
The scar is big, and no amount of ointment (vitamin E, etc.) will substantially reduce it.
Good news: If you had bad knee problems before the surgery your knee will feel a lot better after the surgery.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Joint Replacements Support Group.
Hi, my husband's knee is bone on bone, and he has postponed TKR (bone on bone is bone on bone!) since before Covid! So many, many years. So I would try the glucosamine/chondroitin on any painful joint that has bone on bone!
Hi cathee,
Is your husband in a lot of pain? And if the answer is yes, why is he postponing the surgery? I was in the same situation and the TKRs (yep, both knees) got rid of the pain. The procedure was life changing for me. I was 67 when I had them replaced in 2022. I'm in the gym 7x/week now and I spin 5x/week. My knees have never felt better. FWIW, I'm plagued with osteo arthritis. Joint replacement surgery has been a life saver.
That's why I'm wondering why your husband hasn't had the surgery. It is a traumatic surgery, and recovery involves a lot of work. But contrary to the comment that opened this forum, TKRs are worth the effort.
All the best. Joe
I was taking Glucosamine Chondroitin for years and it made no difference, my knee deterioration continued.
Hi, in response to your question..,my husband had a TKR on his other knee (what he considered the 'better knee') and for some reason, the 'worse knee' stopped hurting! The only thing he could think of was starting the glucosamine...and he has bone on bone (I've seen the x rays). Since I don't have bone on bone (tore my meniscus which caused a bit of OA in patella) I started the glucosamine/chondroitin (with the approval of my pain management physician) just to see if my pain would be alleviated. It was. It still is. BUT, I've also started stretching and thigh strengthening exercises. All comments on this 'chat', I believe, are just sharing what each individual has experienced. That's all. PS I also wear a compression sock daily that seems to help, as well! EVERYONE is different!!
I'm sorry to hear that! We all have individual reactions to our pain and to our improvements with one or the other modalities. I just like this 'forum' because I learn and sometimes benefit from one person, and sometimes not...AND my friends who've had TKR gave me a heck of a time about cancelling my TKR, and I finally said, 'I don't have pain anymore! Would you do it if your pain stopped?' That pretty much stopped them from making me feel guilty! BUT I am perfectly aware that anything can change in a heartbeat...at 70 years old, that statement is true for everything! Good luck to you!
Many studies have been made without any conclusive evidence that Glucosamine Chondroitin works. I like you also took Glucosamine Chondroitin for years without any benefits thinking "what the heck, it can't hurt."