Arthroplasty: Definition, Indications, and Contraindications

Prepared by Dr. Abdulkadir POLAT


Overview

Arthroplasty is a reconstructive surgical procedure performed to relieve pain, restore function, and improve quality of life in patients with end-stage joint disease or irreparable joint damage. Understanding core definitions, key indications, ideal patient features, and contraindications is essential for appropriate patient selection and risk reduction.


Definitions

Arthroplasty

Surgical removal of damaged joint surfaces followed by reconstruction or replacement using artificial materials (implants/prostheses).

Total Arthroplasty

Replacement of all articular surfaces of a joint.

Partial Arthroplasty / Hemiarthroplasty

Replacement of only part of the articular surfaces (e.g., femoral head replacement in the hip).


Most Commonly Performed Joints

  • Hip (THA / hemiarthroplasty)
  • Knee (TKA)
  • Less common: shoulder, elbow, ankle, MTP joints, small joints

Major Indications

1) Advanced Symptomatic Osteoarthritis

Most common indication for hip and knee arthroplasty.

Arthroplasty is typically considered when the patient has:

  • Severe pain (often including night pain)
  • Significant limitation in daily activities
  • Failure of conservative treatments (NSAIDs, physical therapy, injections, weight loss)

Note: Indication is primarily based on symptoms and function and may apply regardless of radiographic stage when disability is substantial.


2) Femoral Neck Fractures

Typically in elderly patients with osteoporosis, especially with displaced fractures.

Key considerations:

  • High risk of avascular necrosis and nonunion
  • Hemiarthroplasty or THA is often preferred in displaced fractures depending on patient factors.

3) Avascular Necrosis (AVN)

  • Joint-preserving procedures may be appropriate in early disease
  • THA is indicated in advanced collapse or secondary arthritis.

4) Rheumatoid Arthritis and Other Inflammatory Arthropathies

Indicated when there is:

  • Joint destruction or deformity
  • Disabling pain and functional impairment
  • Failure of medical treatment with persistent limitation.

5) Post-Traumatic Arthritis

Secondary osteoarthritis due to:

  • Intra-articular fractures
  • Malunion
  • Malalignment

Arthroplasty may be required when symptomatic degeneration becomes advanced and function is significantly impaired.


6) Tumor / Tumor Resection

  • Reconstruction after periarticular tumor resection
  • Often requires modular tumor prostheses, especially when wide resection leads to major bone and soft tissue loss.

Ideal Patient Profile (Clinical Selection)

Patients who most commonly benefit from arthroplasty include those with:

  • Severe chronic joint pain (often with night pain)
  • Markedly reduced walking distance
  • Difficulty with basic activities of daily living (stairs, sitting, rising)
  • Failure of adequate conservative treatment
  • Supportive radiographic findings such as:
    • Joint space narrowing
    • Osteophytes
    • Subchondral sclerosis
    • Deformity

Contraindications for Arthroplasty

Absolute Contraindications

  • Active joint infection
  • Systemic sepsis
  • Severe neurologic/neuromuscular disorder compromising ambulation
  • Medical condition prohibiting anesthesia

Relative Contraindications

  • Very young, highly active patient (risk of early revision)
  • Morbid obesity
  • Severe peripheral vascular disease
  • Poorly controlled diabetes or active inflammatory disease
  • Osteoporosis (increased risk of loosening, particularly in revision settings)

Key Clinical Pearls (OrthoRico Style)

  • Arthroplasty decisions are primarily symptom- and function-driven, not solely radiograph-driven.
  • Infection is an absolute contraindication and must be excluded.
  • Patient optimization (glycemic control, weight management, vascular status) directly impacts outcomes.
  • Tumor and post-traumatic cases often require specialized implants and advanced planning.

Take-Home Message

Arthroplasty is a definitive surgical solution for end-stage joint pathology when pain and disability persist despite conservative management. Appropriate patient selection requires clear understanding of indications, ideal clinical profile, and contraindications to minimize complications and maximize long-term outcomes.

Preoperative Optimisation Checklist (Arthroplasty)

1) Infection Risk & Screening

  • Any active infection? (skin, urinary, dental, respiratory, etc.)
  • If suspicious: CRP/ESR, clinical exam, and targeted consultation if needed
  • Skin check: intertrigo, ulcers, cellulitis, active dermatitis/psoriasis flare
  • Prior joint surgery or history of PJI → perform risk stratification

2) Medical Optimisation

  • Diabetes: HbA1c target (per institutional policy) + perioperative glucose plan
  • Cardiac risk: consider cardiology evaluation when indicated; plan antiplatelet/anticoagulant management
  • Pulmonary: optimise COPD/OSA; support smoking cessation
  • Renal/hepatic disease: medication dose adjustments and perioperative fluid/electrolyte strategy
  • Anaesthesia fitness: ASA assessment and required pre-op workup

3) VTE (DVT/PE) Risk Plan

  • Assess VTE history, malignancy, obesity, immobility, thrombophilia
  • Prophylaxis plan: mechanical + pharmacological (per local protocol)
  • Early mobilisation strategy

4) Haemoglobin & Blood Management

  • Screen for anaemia (Hb, ferritin ± B12/folate as appropriate)
  • Correct iron deficiency preoperatively when present
  • Bleeding risk assessment / TXA plan (if appropriate)

5) Nutrition & Weight

  • Morbid obesity: higher risk (infection, wound complications, medical events)
  • If malnutrition suspected: albumin/total protein and dietitian support
  • Set practical, patient-specific weight and nutrition goals

6) Bone Health

  • Osteoporosis risk: age, fragility fracture history, chronic steroid use
  • Consider DXA and initiate treatment when indicated
  • Note implications for fixation choice (cemented vs cementless) and fracture risk

7) Rheumatology / Immunosuppression Plan (if applicable)

  • Perioperative management of DMARDs/biologics (aligned with local / EULAR–ACR practice)
  • Stress-dose steroid considerations if on chronic steroids
  • Infection risk assessment and optimisation

8) Patient Preparation

  • Set expectations: pain control, rehab timeline, walking goals
  • Home setup and support needs (stairs, caregiver availability)
  • Prehabilitation: quadriceps, hip abductors, gait training

Hip vs Knee Arthroplasty: Practical Differences in Indications (Quick Table)

TopicHip Arthroplasty (THA / Hemiarthroplasty)Knee Arthroplasty (TKA / UKA)
Most common indicationAdvanced symptomatic hip OAAdvanced symptomatic knee OA
Fracture-related indicationsDisplaced femoral neck fractures in elderly: hemi/THA commonPrimary TKA for fractures is uncommon; more often post-traumatic OA later
AVNAVN with collapse/secondary arthritis is a key indication for THAAVN less common; TKA indication more selective
Inflammatory arthropathyRA/inflammatory arthritis with hip destruction/deformityRA/inflammatory arthritis with knee destruction/deformity
Post-traumatic arthritisAfter acetabular or femoral head/neck injuriesCommon after tibial plateau or distal femur fractures
Deformity/alignment focusLimb length, offset, rotation, COR restorationVarus/valgus deformity, flexion contracture, instability, balancing
Partial replacementHemiarthroplasty (especially fractures)UKA in selected unicompartmental disease
Primary planning goalPain relief + restoration of hip biomechanics (COR/offset)Pain relief + stability + alignment + balanced gaps

References

  1. Learmonth ID, Young C, Rorabeck C. The operation of the century: total hip replacement. Lancet. 2007;370(9597):1508–1519.
  2. Ethgen O, Bruyère O, Richy F, Dardennes C, Reginster JY. Health-related quality of life in total hip and total knee arthroplasty: A qualitative and systematic review of the literature. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2004;86(5):963–974.
  3. Kurtz S, Ong K, Lau E, Mowat F, Halpern M. Projections of primary and revision hip and knee arthroplasty in the United States from 2005 to 2030. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2007;89(4):780–785.
  4. Goodman SB, Gallo J. Periprosthetic joint infection: Diagnosis and management. J Am Acad Orthop Surg. 2019;27(16):e695–e704.
  5. Ritter MA, Meding JB. Total knee arthroplasty: Indications, techniques, and results. Instr Course Lect. 2004;53:267–275.
  6. Mont MA, Hungerford DS. Non-traumatic avascular necrosis of the femoral head. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 1995;77(3):459–474.

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