The Knee
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Multicenter Study
Survivorship and patient satisfaction of robotic-assisted medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty at a minimum two-year follow-up.
Successful clinical outcomes following unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) depend on lower limb alignment, soft tissue balance and component positioning, which can be difficult to control using manual instrumentation. Although robotic-assisted surgery more reliably controls these surgical factors, studies assessing outcomes of robotic-assisted UKA are lacking. Therefore, a prospective multicenter study was performed to assess outcomes of robotic-assisted UKA. ⋯ In this multicenter study, robotic-assisted UKA was found to have high survivorship and satisfaction rate at short-term follow-up. Prospective comparison studies with longer follow-up are necessary in order to compare survivorship and satisfaction rates of robotic-assisted UKA to conventional UKA and total knee arthroplasty.
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Prior knee surgery and arthroscopy is known to increase complications and re-operations in subsequent total knee arthroplasty (TKA). We set out to examine the time dependant effect of arthroscopy on Patient Reported Outcome Measures following subsequent TKA. ⋯ There appears to be a negative impact of arthroscopy in relation to subsequent TKA which seems to be time dependent. TKA should not routinely be performed within six months of arthroscopy. This should inform guidelines on the management knee osteoarthritis.