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      Patient satisfaction after total knee arthroplasty: who is satisfied and who is not?

      Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
      Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee, adverse effects, psychology, rehabilitation, Cross-Sectional Studies, Disability Evaluation, Female, Health Status Indicators, Humans, Knee Joint, physiopathology, surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Ontario, epidemiology, Pain, Patient Satisfaction, statistics & numerical data, Postoperative Complications, etiology, Questionnaires, Range of Motion, Articular, Recovery of Function, Treatment Outcome

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          Abstract

          Despite substantial advances in primary TKA, numerous studies using historic TKA implants suggest only 82% to 89% of primary TKA patients are satisfied. We reexamined this issue to determine if contemporary TKA implants might be associated with improved patient satisfaction. We performed a cross-sectional study of patient satisfaction after 1703 primary TKAs performed in the province of Ontario. Our data confirmed that approximately one in five (19%) primary TKA patients were not satisfied with the outcome. Satisfaction with pain relief varied from 72-86% and with function from 70-84% for specific activities of daily living. The strongest predictors of patient dissatisfaction after primary TKA were expectations not met (10.7x greater risk), a low 1-year WOMAC (2.5x greater risk), preoperative pain at rest (2.4x greater risk) and a postoperative complication requiring hospital readmission (1.9x greater risk). Level II, prognostic study. See Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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