Abstract

IntroductionThe optimal dosing of post-operative total knee arthroplasty (TKA) narcotics is unclear. We report on the average narcotic usage in a group of patients treated with an identical multimodal pain protocol following TKA. Materials and methods49 patients undergoing TKA participated in the survey. Patients with pre-op narcotic use, recent prior total joint arthroplasty or study refusal were excluded. All patients received a spinal anesthetic. No pre-surgery narcotics were given. All received an identical local infiltrative anesthetic combination along with a multimodal pain protocol. Patients were placed into an identical rapid rehab program. Narcotic usage during hospitalization was recorded in morphine equivalent doses (MED). Patients were given a journal to record their daily narcotic utilization. ResultsPre-operative pain scores of the excluded groups had slightly higher but clinically insignificant differences compared to the study group. In the hospital, POD1 study group daily MED averaged 28 (range 0–110). POD2 had an average of 33.6 and POD 3 daily usages averaged 28.6 (range 0–100). By the end of week two, the average daily use was 19.2 and 24% patients were off all narcotics. By the end of week four, the average daily usage was 7.5 and 63% of patients were off all narcotics. By 8 weeks, there were no patients still taking narcotics. KSS averaged 76.9 (range 51–97) at the 6 week visit, and 94.2 at the 3-month visit (range 72–100). SummaryThis study documents the average needs of an average TKA patient treated with modern pain protocols. The majority of these patients were off narcotics by week four.

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