Publication | Open Access
The Feasibility and Perioperative Complications of Outpatient Knee Arthroplasty
269
Citations
15
References
2009
Year
We have content for each. Background: first sentence: "The duration of hospitalization and subsequent length of recovery after elective knee arthroplasty have decreased." Also last line includes "Outpatient knee arthroplasty surgery is feasible in a large percentage of patients yet early readmissions may be decreased with a prolonged hospitalization." That is also background? It's labeled [Findings, Background]. So background includes that too. So combine: "Hospitalization duration and recovery after elective knee arthroplasty have decreased, and outpatient knee arthroplasty is feasible for many patients, though early readmissions may be reduced with longer stays." Need concise.
The duration of hospitalization and subsequent length of recovery after elective knee arthroplasty have decreased. We hypothesized same-day discharge following either a unicompartmental (UKA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in an unselected group of patients would not result in a higher perioperative complication rate than standard-length hospitalization when following a comprehensive perioperative clinical pathway, including preoperative teaching, regional anesthesia, preemptive oral analgesia, preemptive antiemetics, and a rapid rehabilitation protocol. We prospectively followed 111 of all 121 patients who had primary knee arthroplasty completed by noon and who agreed to be followed prospectively; 25 had UKA and 86 TKA. Of the 111 patients, 104 (94%, 24 with UKA and 80 with TKA) met discharge criteria and were discharged directly to home the day of surgery. Nausea requiring additional treatment before discharge was the most common reason for a delay in discharge. There were four (3.6%) readmissions (all with TKA) and one emergency room visit without readmission (in a patient with a TKA) within the first week after surgery, while there were four subsequent readmissions (3.6%) and one additional emergency room visit without readmission within three months of surgery, all among patients undergoing TKA. There were no deaths, cardiac events, or pulmonary complications during this study. Outpatient knee arthroplasty surgery is feasible in a large percentage of patients yet early readmissions may be decreased with a prolonged hospitalization.Level IV, therapeutic study. See Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
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