If you struggle with joint pain, stiffness or swelling due to arthritis or another joint disorder, you may be a candidate for joint replacement surgery.
Tens of thousands of Americans successfully undergo joint replacement procedures every year, helping them find symptom relief and resume the activities they enjoy. With today’s advanced surgical techniques and durable joint implant materials, results are long lasting, too.
Spectrum Orthopaedics’ board-certified orthopaedic surgeons perform hundreds of joint replacement surgeries each year. It’s a level of experience that no other orthopaedic practice in Maine can match—and it’s reflected in our patients’ excellent outcomes.
When do you need a joint replacement?
Before we recommend joint replacement surgery, we typically suggest non-surgical measures to alleviate your pain and stiffness, and preserve your natural joint. These conservative treatments may include:
- Over-the-counter non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDS) such as ibuprofen, naproxen and acetaminophen
- Avoiding or modifying activities that cause pain
- Physical therapy and low-impact exercise
- Weight loss to take pressure off damaged joints
- Bracing to provide support
- Corticosteroid injections
If these conservative measures don’t provide sufficient relief, joint replacement may be the best solution for eliminating your pain and restoring mobility. But this decision is made only after a thorough health evaluation and discussion between you and our orthopaedic specialists.
Types of joint replacement
Spectrum’s orthopaedic surgeons perform a wide variety of today’s most advanced joint replacement procedures, including:
In traditional knee replacement, your surgeon makes an 8” to 10” vertical incision in the center of the knee to view and access the joint. With the minimally invasive approach, your surgeon makes a shorter (4” to 6”) incision and uses what’s called a quadriceps-sparing technique to access the joint. This avoids trauma to the tendon and muscles in the front of the thigh, which generally results in less post-operative pain and a faster recovery.
Also called a unicompartmental knee replacement, this procedure is an alternative to total knee replacement if your joint disease is limited to just one area of your knee. Your surgeon resurfaces only this portion of your knee with metal and plastic components. A partial knee replacement is less invasive, which often means a faster recovery, and better range of motion and knee function since it preserves healthy tissue and bone in your knee. You are still a candidate for total knee replacement should you need it in the future.
In traditional hip replacement, the surgeon makes a single, long incision on the side or back of the hip to access the hip joint. Muscles are split or detached from the hip so it can be dislocated and fully viewed. The damaged bone is then cut and removed. With the minimally invasive approach, the surgeon makes one or two shorter incisions, and fewer muscles around the hip are cut or detached. With the minimally invasive approach, there tends to be less soft-tissue damage, a quicker and less painful recovery, and faster return to normal activities. It is not appropriate for everyone, however; the most suitable candidates are thinner, younger, healthier, and motivated to participate in rehabilitation.
This is a minimally invasive surgical technique that involves a 3” to 4” incision on the front (anterior) of the hip. This approach enables the surgeon to access the joint by moving muscles aside along their natural tissue planes, without detaching any tendons. The direct anterior hip replacement procedure often results in quicker recovery, less pain, and more normal function after hip replacement. Patients are able to return to their regular activities shortly after surgery with a reduced risk of dislocation.
The shoulder is a ball-and-socket joint in which the head of your upper arm bone (humerus) fits into a shallow socket in your shoulder blade. In total shoulder replacement, the damaged parts of the shoulder joint are removed and replaced with a highly polished metal ball attached to a stem, and a plastic socket. Depending on the extent of your joint disease, you surgeon may replace just the head of your humerus bone (ball) or both the ball and the socket.
For people with large rotator cuff tears who develop a type of shoulder arthritis called “cuff tear arthropathy,” traditional total shoulder replacement isn’t effective. Instead, a procedure called reverse total shoulder replacement is used. In this procedure, the prosthetic socket and ball are reversed, with a metal ball attached to the shoulder bone and a plastic socket attached to the upper arm bone. This enables the patient to use the deltoid muscle instead of the torn rotator cuff to lift the arm. Reverse shoulder replacement is also an option for patients who have had a previous traditional shoulder replacement that failed.
In this procedure, damaged parts of the humerus (upper arm bone) and ulna (forearm bone on the little finger side) are replaced with an artificial elbow joint made up of a metal and plastic hinge with two metal stems. The stems fit inside the hollow part of the bone called the canal. A partial elbow replacement may also be an option. Your surgeon will talk to you about the best type of elbow replacement for you.
Know what to expect from joint replacement surgery
Studies show that informed patients have better outcomes. There are a number of ways to being informed about your joint replacement. We have education material that can be found here on our website as well as handouts in the office.
Our hospital partners offer free joint classes and connect you with a nurse navigator to make sure you have all the information you need for your hospital procedure. If you are scheduled to have your joint replacement as an overnight patient in the hospital you will be provided the pre-surgical class schedule.
An innovative approach to pain management
Rather than rely solely on narcotic medications for pain management after joint replacement, Spectrum takes an innovative multi-modal approach. This means administering two or more drugs that act by different mechanisms to provide pain relief—such as regional nerve blocks and non-narcotic medications.
Research shows that this approach improves pain relief while reducing opioid requirements and their related adverse effects—including the risk of addiction.
Importantly, it enables our patients to be up and moving—without significant pain—within hours of surgery, putting them on a fast path to recovery.
Physical rehabilitation: The key to your recovery
Joint replacement surgery is only the first step in regaining your range of motion, strength, flexibility, endurance, and ability to perform everyday activities. An individualized physical therapy program is essential for your optimal recovery.
You’ll begin your physical rehabilitation before your planned procedure and then within hours of waking up from surgery, starting with gentle exercises to help you bear weight and move your new joint. Your Spectrum team will refer you to meet with your therapist before surgery and then you will schedule appointments to be ready for rehabilitation right after discharge.
Make an appointment with a Spectrum joint replacement specialist
To schedule a consultation with a Spectrum joint replacement specialist, please: Contact Us