Abstract

The literature has displayed conflicting evidence on resident involvement in surgical procedures. The goal of this study was to assess the impact of resident involvement on primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) under a single fellowship-trained adult reconstruction surgeon. Two hundred sequential patients were retrospectively reviewed by a single surgeon: the first cohort represented the final 100 TKAs performed by the surgeon without resident involvement (NRI), serving as the control group, and the second cohort represented the initial 100 TKAs performed by the same surgeon with resident involvement (RI), serving as the experimental group. Perioperative variables such as number of people in operating room (OR), surgical time, and tourniquet time, and postoperative variables such as infection, minor complications, medial distal femoral angle, medial proximal tibia angle, and total angulation were assessed. The rate of infection was significantly lower in the RI group (0%) compared to the NRI group (1%) (P= .043). The number of staff in the OR (P < .001), the tourniquet time (P < .001), and OR time (P < .001) were significantly higher in the RI group compared to the NRI group. There was no difference in coronal plane radiographic measurements: medial distal femoral angle (P= .10), medial proximal tibia angle (P= .19), or total angulation (P= .27). Resident involvement in primary TKA neither demonstrated any significant difference in coronal plane radiographic alignment of the prosthesis nor an increased risk of infection despite increased operative time, tourniquet time, and number of people in OR. Level 3 - Therapeutic retrospective cohort study.

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