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Organisation of your Knee Replacement    
     
Initially you will be referred to an Orthopaedic Surgeon, who will assess you and discuss whether surgery is appropriate for you, and if so, which type of implant to use. Once your operation is scheduled, you will probably be asked to attend the hospital for pre-operative assessment some weeks before the date of your operation. Following your operation, you will attend an outpatient review clinic to monitor your progress.  
     
The Operation    
     
The knee is opened, and muscles and ligaments are separated so that the surgeon can access the joint.
     
Using special instruments, the damaged surfaces of the femur and tibia are removed and the lower end of the femur is re-shaped and replaced with a metal shell. The upper end of the shin bone (the tibia) is also removed and is replaced with a metal plate. A plastic insert is placed between the two metal components. Sometimes the surgeon also removes part of the knee cap and replaces this with a plastic “button”. The artificial parts are sometimes cemented in place, and sometimes are simply a “press fit”, and the patients own bone integrates into a rough surface on the implant to fix it into place.

The joint capsule is sown back together and the muscle layers and ligaments repositioned prior to the skin being sutured.

     
After the Operation    
     
Recovery from any operation varies from patient to patient and is partly dependent on pre-operative fitness levels. Post-operative rehabilitation regimes vary from hospital to hospital and surgeon to surgeon, so it is not possible to give any specific post-operative instructions. In general it will take you about a week to learn to climb stairs with crutches, about six weeks to be able to drive, and somewhere within this period you will be happy to take a bath without assistance. In three months most people are back at work, free of a stick or crutches and sleeping on the operated side. You will be given detailed post-operative instructions by your surgeon before you leave hospital. If you want specific exercises to carry out which will aid your recovery ask your surgeon or the physiotherapy department at your hospital.