No Clear Advantage to Use of Wound Drains After Unilateral TKA: A Prospective Randomized, Controlled Trial
Cao Li, MD, Ablimit Nijat, MD, Mamtimin Askar, MD
The Journal of Arthroplasty, volume 26, Issue 4
Abstract
We conducted a prospective randomized, controlled trial in 100 patients to compare the postoperative use of wound drains with the use of no drains in patients who underwent unilateral primary total knee arthroplasty to determine differences in blood loss, range of motion, wound healing, complications (deep vein thrombosis, wound infection), and need for blood transfusions. The patients, who underwent surgery between February 2006 and February 2007, were randomly divided into 2 groups of 50 each: group A, treated without a drain, and group B, treated with a drain. The between-group difference in total blood loss was significant: 535 ± 295 mL in group A and 853 ± 331 mL in group B. Group A needed comparatively less blood transfused than group B did. Differences in wound infection, incidence of deep vein thrombosis, and range of motion were not statistically significant between groups. We found no clear advantage to the use of wound drains in unilateral total knee arthroplasty.
- Reconstruction of Patellar Tendon Disruption After TKA:
- Second-Generation Locking Mechanisms and Ethylene Oxide Sterilization Reduce Tibial
- Total Knee Arthroplasty with Use of Computer-Assisted Navigation
- No Clear Advantage to Use of Wound Drains After Unilateral TKA: A Prospective Randomized, Controlled Trial
- Intra-articular local anaesthetic on the day after surgery improves pain and patient satisfaction
- Does High Tibial Osteotomy Affect the Success or Survival of a Total Knee Replacement?
- Muscle damage during minimally invasive surgical tka traditional versus optimized subvastus approach
- Is Minimally Invasive TKA Associated with Lower Costs Than Traditional TKA?
- Superior fixation of pegged trabecular metal over screw-fixed pegged porous titanium fiber mesh: